' NTE R U!!!/PPOI

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Special issue on tenure
'
U!!!/PPOI NTE R
SERIE'i VIII, VOL. 17 UW-STEVENS POINT, THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 1974 NO. 19
Students challenge overspending
by Bob Kull.slcdt
faculty I wu.-programatic, " U W S P
s p e n d s
"We are losing faculty as • s.or.id Sigmund.
more than H should for
direct resull of ad ·
According to liguru Gene ral Opentions and
ministrati\'e overspMding," supplied by the Ofrice of Services !commonly known
said Student Government Budget Planning and as administration) . ''The
Prftidenl Jim Hamilton. " We Analysis. s.id Hamilton, administralionlsC115IIn& over
are losing so many fa culty
~~!~~~i:; =:~~
~;!~ ~~~~~~a~;;;u~~~
a number of his advisors,
Hamilton -and Student controUer Bob B.adzinski both
maint.ained that educational
qu.a1ity was bdna sacriftced
at this institution.
t:twin Sl1mund, assistant
to the vice<hancellor for
academic a ffa ln disagreed.
" Academic pfOiramminB it
theeutsof the operation here.
We ha~ not and will not
reduce the number of faculty
so as to harm the quality of
educationatthisunivenlty."
Michigan Ave. Extension
Pub Ii c Hearing Set
A public hea ring on the Michigan A\·e. extension is
sche<luledfor3p.m .. T\Iesday, Feb. 26inthemainloungeof
De Bot Centtr The hearing will be sponsored by Student
Go\·emment .
Jim namilton,student Bovtrnment president. said that it
,.-ouldbeanopenhearinl.where"anyoneandeveryonecan
1\ave their aay."
By contrul. !he areas of
SludentServtcesandUbrary
and M~a are funded at the
lowest levelslnthestate. Thls
amounll; 10 a grou misuse of
funds."
taken oul of our ad·
ministrative budget. Con·
s.tqutntly, lhe Student Se:r·
vices budget a lso looks lower
than it actually is.''
"The basic problem here is
that the institution u a whole
B«ause of diUertflt clr -
::C:~~t~-~v~:iJa'li~:~~
$180,000 more than it should.
f~!~::r:i-.t~~~~~'tu:~~i ~-;,ot!e~~~n~~i ~h~:::. \~:!
here wu not out of liiW.'. books af!!! capit.a l equipment
"AreasusuallyWldet-StiJdent for the hbrary, were cut to
Servictsilreatthisinstitution pa y faculty . Thta eannot
c barged to 1 he ad- continue inderinlte:ly. We will
ministration. For uample, t'ith~ h.ave _to Btl men
computer time fo r equ1t.ble fundlfll , or we will
Regist r ation and Records be facing r eal problem•
fpart of Stl.:lent Set-vicesl \1 withi n another year."
J scheduled
fa~~f~~Y a~~m~~!s~ ntt~
to
dismissed
t
1
be
after this semester , ac co rdinJ to Sltm und .
" Howe,·er , when we are
formally notified that the
user fee money will be
ret urned . ~-e will be able to
rescindrive ofthosenotices .
V>o'e also hope th11t ber•use of
1ncreases in 19'aduate level
enrollment . ~·e willbeableto
getthefundltocoveranother
four positions ."
Sigmund added that even If
~-e lose all 70 positions, the
utstitutionwill btovers'-'fftd
by as many as six facult y
members spread tN-oughout
the variOUI departmtflts. " I
do not believe that the
educational quality ol this
Institution can be suffering
...-hen we are overstaffed."
Qualityaufferedber•useof
discrepancies between
dq>a.rtmentt , said Hamilton,
and because trends were not
bdng properly anticipated.
The History l)e>partment tall
216 m~ben of the Histor}'
Department are tenured I will
still be overstaffed by more
than four ~M»itionsevenaner
It loses three faculty membon
''"""" '"'' ""'
"'
~i:!~a~e~ ~ ~~t
5hort nearly two poaitlon. .
Neither d1nce teacher is
tenurtd.
Siemund ui d that trJC h
~~~Yc'f:!mnot ~mC:S'!'!ut~
semester. lA&al problems
involved wi th the non ·
r"ttaini"l ol tenured faculty
s low thi• process con·
siderably . " I think ~'t are
goinB to be able to come out
well in the ltgal problems
because the firat criteria lin
the non-retention of tenured
.
1
..
~
City living got your goot? See organ ic form feature , pages 12 ond 13.
on
the inside ....
Tenured foculty contests firing , page three
Senate questions Union a dd ition planning , page four
Two announce write- in candidocies, poge four
FAC schedules budget hearings, page five
Tenu re, a ma ny splendored thing?, page six
Administration responds lo tenure is.sue critics, page seven
Speokers stress block identity, page nine
next: next, next...
t:ormws soTt; : the Mxt
i~'IH'
ul lhf
1 ' 111/~ T E it
will be
t '.-h, 211. ,\ JI mat..,-\a l • uboulll.-dlorpubllcatlonlnthat
h~u.- tlnc ludlns adt and
u mp11~ u l.-ndar malerillll
no~r>tbf-~llbmiJtf'dbyt'rlclay,
. -.. b. '!'!.
11.-malnlna in11n
of
the
l'ulniH""'IIIhep rintedon the
ln]to,.lng datu : .-eb . 28.
;\l!,o r c:h 1, March II, Aprll 4,
,\prll :5and:'ollly2.
TH E PO IN T ER
Fcb•ua•y 21 . 197 4
-------
•
" Magnolia" was the li rs t ba nd to pl ay in the coff('('huuSt·
additi on .
_)
New coffehouse has acoustical problems
b)
T~ rr)
We all
R )a n
kno.,..
a
litt l e
somcth1ng about rooms ,
nght" l.ike bedroom tsm• r k
s nurk l. bathroom toh my ' >.
hvmg room <ah yest . clean
rumn •well. eh I, em pty
nHJm thuh '? 1, no room cwhat
bathroom No p e . tt ' s tngemou s suggested con ·
somethm g more like wron g ver t ang It an to a shoot 1ng
range. w1th perhaps the
.. Irs designed for milking engm~ rs and des1gners as
cows :· som e said . whil e movmg t."J rgcl'i Hut that's
others though ! il would be ra tht•r ha rsh wou ldn 't you
better used to raise hats and suy"! ;\Her all . 1t's not their
scorpions . And those more fa ult : th a t th e mo lec ular
room
s trut·turc of mortar and s teel
IS not condut'l\l' to ab)()tbmg
M>Und "' :nt•:. llov. "'ere they
to kno"' that tlw :.ound "'ould
bounce hal'k anti forth 111 th.:a t
bnt•k box ltkt• .1 " UI>l'rball ln a
garbage
Cllll ''
Good gncf.
lh cy' r e onl y hum a n
We
Uw h "''· but last mght , at
tlw upcnmg of the new cof·
fl't'h uusc concert room •n the
L'nLvl• r s •t~ Center . I
u' £• rh~.·ard a new term for a
room b<-mg ~ ssed about and
I p1c h-d-up on 11 nght away
11'-. one or those rev.· thmgs
onc fmds nov.acbys wh1ch
n: ally means what 11 says
•Sorr) ~1r N1xon I \\'hat was
the term . ~
u ask '"
Sh11room
p
'' i':01A' JUSt
hold
"you say
~dg!nc~saa~ ~~ ~~~
turc '' People can 't go around
t·alhng thmgs that' Besides .
'<oH' already ha\•e bath room on
the hst ·· Well . I found out
that 1t 's not the same as
The t•oinlf'r as a second clau
Uni v erSit y publication .
pubhlh~ .,. ee.kly durmg the
Khool year m Stevens Po1nt.
WitcoriSm S4411 It II pUbllShed
unde r the aulhor1ty granted to
the Boud or Rqents of Srate
Unlveraitlet by Sec:tion 'n II .
Wa&consln Sta tutes. P ub!lc.at1on
coats are p.~id by the State of
Wiaconain under con traell
awarded by the State Ptintina
Section. SUite De-partment of
Administration. as provided ln
State Prlntina Operational
BuUetl.n f.l4 ol Aup t 11. 1m
ACtt:r lht: ba ll wu over. the
ne:w coffeehouse: n oor looked
like this . A lar ge: section of
the. concert budgtt goes for
mamtenanct: not jmt fol tht:
bands
all make mts ta kes. n ght .,
Someo ne once said the
pnce of knowledge is lea rm ng
from our m ista kt..os. Great'
Oh . spea king of pr ice. I was
wonder ing ea rli er who would
foo l th e b i ll fo r th at
mi slake .. .hcllo big s pender '
•
Februo ry 21 , 1974
Rondo/ph Klein
"And now here I om
being fired by my own university."
Page 4
THE POINTER
Feb<uO 'V 21, 1974
Senate questions Union addition planning
by KrtsMoum
Hon Hatchet, director of the
univcrs•ty cen ter , was the
~ucst speaker a t the Feb . 17,
S tudent Go,.ernment
mectmg
In 1959, when the original
b01ldmg opened, the student
ac:tl \'11 )' fe-e -.·as $10, with It
Plans for building an a d·
dttion t o the Universlly
Center beg:m in 1965 whlll'
enrollment ut UWSP Y.'rl
n
the increase. he said.
Th e Univ ersll \'.
It
as supported fr om the money
1s sc lf -s u s ta1 ·,
rec:e1ved through s tud ent
mcreasmg over the years to
actJVII)' fees and
the 5-15 fee now d \3rl(ed. satd
Hatchet
from the book store, rood
sc n •1cc a nd recr ea t 1on
rc,·enues
dltwn ll atc tll'l s;ud that tile
l->hiplllt-1 noor nt.'C('SSary fo r a
tht•, l! t•r "ould t'UI doY.'II on lht.•
nt''<lhlhtv nf the room
II
:ts kt.>d b\' St.•n Dale
Jur~t'IIMIII whctllcr :.tudeul !t
"ton· uwluded 111 makm~ the
1)(-p:.rinu..•n t of Housmg and lk'l'blon on b01ldmg an ad ·
d111on
Urban [)e,·elopmenl
Senator T om Kru eger
11 ,1 tcht.'t :.atd th3t th r ee.•
as ked ll<llcbet why no theater .. tudl·nt:. "ere on ttl<> 1965
"-33 planrK'd 10 lhe hC"- ad
t•onumth.'t' "hen but ldmg a n
J.n..•a
tncre are no t:n:
dolla r:-. rL'<'CI \'cd through tux
approprHJIIons 1n o lhl'r
dt.•Jmrtm ents. said llatchl'l
The only g o" ernm L• nt
11\0il\.'\ r<'C\.'1 \'ed IS a n ·arh
!>Ubs1dv or $28,57 1 fr01i1 UK;
"·'l'>.
add tti on
sulcrcd .
was
being
con ·
Prc s idenl Jim Ha milt on
presen ted a resol uti on and 11
prOJXISa l concerning fa cilities
111 the University Cenler
•
The resolution stated lh.1t
~ nee the University Cent<'r
13 s upported by sludent funds,
s tud e nts s hould have ftr s t
pnon ty in the use or the
University Center .
lkocnuse Stude nt Govern ·
mcnt is the represcnt nlivc of
the s tude nt s, I t .s hould
determ ine the office s pac<'
~!-. ~ltllt•r 111 the ~lil"aukt-t' and the occ upants of the
orf1ce space, the resolution
Jutn·u.d arltclt•
Anwn:1 . .,..h1ch !a!lt-d to s tate
r.1t1h thl' federa l EHA .
rt'('t'l;tl~ pa~t>d lcgt:.lahon
In the resol ution, Ham11t on
\ l'f ~ :.umla r to AsS<'mbly Bill
s:.ud that Student Go\lcrn ·
ment s hould appoint n
!I
~h ~!til e r 531d tha t 11 1~ Student Advisor y Commtllt.'<'
11\'t"l':-:-arv to wrt h.' to your t o wo rk with th e Un iY ·
:-t•n:Jtor :'1nd tell hun to s tart e r s ily s t aff on
.1t'110n un the b1 ll
matters that co nc e rn
l-:CJtl.ll nghts r rtlt l'S t.•on- s tud<'nts .
h·ndt·d an (' qual nght s
llam 1lton 's proposal 'asked
.Jilll'IHiment propost•d last
Spnn~ ~.tas too \'ague . ~ts for an im ·estiga tion in to the
~ltllt·r 'a1d
~O"- thl.'\ con· poss1btlity of usi ng the form er
IL'nd tlw b1ll 1s too sp(-ct hc Text Rental room for the
~h ~lt llc r ""as s peak.tn~ '" Student Go\lemment 's Day
,, -.t•nunar on scxtsm at a Ca re Center Program .
l 'mtl'd Counc1l I.A>gts latl\'t'
\\'urk,Jtup hl'ld rccc.•ntly 111
Due to the possibili ly or
Madi MJII
h1ring classiried positions lo
continue the Day Ca r l'
Ccn le r . plus the decrca s1ng
a ll ot ments fr om Student
Ac th•ity , the need for ex ·
.J
pnJ\t-d thl' app>mtments of p.'lndmg the space for the
thrt•t• assem blymen to center 1s essential .
Bill would eliminate sex .distinctions
b\ Kri' ~l oum
J'vt.' aiways "-'3nled to be a
male chaU\'Ini SI , but I was
handu:apped b)' not bemg a
male
Now my opp>rtunity
ha:. a rr tved
Kep Mtdge Mill e r t O·
Madison I hclpt.-d draft a bill
tha t would chmmate most sex
d!shnc t1ons from Wisconsin
It 1s known as
lnw:.
A.-,...o.embly IJ1II 23
Th e roam s ubs tantl\le
cha nges called for m the bill
appl y to rape la...,'S, domestic
relat1ons. prostitution laws.
.. mnlovec! retJrement benefits
and Yetera n bene:fil.1; .
The only nc ....· proYtsluu· ••
that 111 cases where the
husband IS lega ll y unable to
support h1s family . the wi Ce
would then be responsible.
Hapc laws would be ex·
pand e d to a pply fo r
homosex ual assault to men
and boys. a nd to women who
fo r ce nonc o nsentual in·
ter cow-se upon m~ .
Btl! !3 ...,·ould also make It
e n me for any person. maJe or
female , to engage or hire in
prost ttutton
Dtvorce ac taon could be
f1led by either s pouse , based
on non -support . a nd fathers.
husbands and ~o~.· idowe r s
""ould be eltg1ble to live in
veteran 's homes
Empl oyee
ret1rement
benefits ...,1Klld be apphed to a
survaYtng spouse and not just
to the w1dower or a worker .
Also 1ncluded m the bill is
the rew o rd1n g of anti ·
dascnmanat1o n laws to
pr o h1b1t the de n ial · of
privalc.ogc based on selt. as
well as race , color . creed and
na tiOnal ongtn .
Spec1al a m endments have
bc.."t"n added~he bill to
overcome object s directed
at an earlier
ual rightS"
amendment whJ
failed in a
statewtde referend'\'f' a year
a
ago.
Th e new amen dm e nt s
would not permit the drafting
of women or repeal rape
laws. nor would it allow
co mmon wa s hr ooms fo r
males and femal es. sa1d Ms
exam ple \I.'Ould be where a
:ttat ut e wall sav three ·
member board uistead of
th r ee·ma n board
The
word111g change merely
clan f1es that men and women
may scn ·e on the committee .
In early October. Bill 23
passt.>d the Assembly w1th
b1partisan support. and was
removed from lhe Ucalth .
Education and Welfa r e
Comm1ttce
The B1ll was then placed
Into the Governmental and
Veteran 's Alfa1rs Committee .
c haired by Sen . Gordon
Rosclc1p I R· Darlifl8tOn I .
811! 23 has been locked in
Hoseleip 's com mittee s ince
Ocl. 9, 1973. The only action
th:.t wns taken wa s a public
heanng held Oct 19. !9i3
An a r hcle m a recent 1ssue
of the ~ l il...,aukt't' Journal
quotc.'!l ~Is ~1tll e r as s.aym~
that HoseiCip IS not Slmpl~
mdulgmg h1s b1as. but 1s
" nlh.• rferlllg with nor mO'II.
democratic process "
Senator t l1Hor d Krm-gl'r
1 H-1\tc rtll l rnO\'l>d to pull tlw
b1ll from comm111ec Jan ll.
but a mo\'c for adJOurnment
pr evented a \' Ot c on
Kr U('gcr ·s motaon
If the bil l does not pass m
th1s sesston . the sex di Sti ll(' ·
tlon s wou ld be co ntest<•d
ind1Y1dua ll y m court . wh1ch
.... ould be s low and cost ly . s ud
Two announce write-in candidacies
by Krls Mourn
JohnNe\'!llsand Ron Konkol
are got"l to be rwmi ng as
...,Tite·m candidates for clly
and county positions .
Their names were an ·
nounced as candidates at the
Fe b. 11 meeting of Student
Governme nt .
Ne ... ins will be see king
e lection In district two of the
city . and Konkol will be
runn1111 for election in the
11th county district.
Student backing is needed .
satd Wi nters , vice-president
o ( s tudent government , to
assist the candidates in their
campaign .
In further go ... er nm ent
business , Sen. Jan Te:nhula,
c hairman of the academic
affairs com m ittee , reported
tha t an external degree
program proposal has passed
the Faculty Academic Affau· .s Committee and the
Faculty Senate .
An exte rn a l degr ee
program ...,.ould allow people
to r eee1Ye a pro fessional
deg ree from UWSP w!lhout
attendang classes
The proposed helds for thll->
program are pulp and paper .
early c h1ldhood and resource
managem ent
Furth e r
dJSCUSSIOII On the proposal
wtll be held at a late r date
A Faculty
AdV ISO r Y
Comm1ttee 1s now 10
operation It
supplc.·mf'nt
the present adv1sory S)S tem
fol' s tudents
They ...,.,11 s uppl y students
w1th a lts t of adv1sors for
class schedulmg It w1ll also
be an mformation center
about
UWSP and othN
schools .
It 1s open 40 hours a week
und Is located in room 10:..
Collins Classroom Center
Bob Badzinski. s tuden t
controller . sa id that hea nngs
for budgeta have been set up
Any orgamz.ation that has
not rece1ved funds should fill
out a budge t fol'm Fonns arc
aYatlable m room 2~3 . Old
"''II
~t am
Sludcnt
Government
ap·
Thefts and demol ition derby
reported to Protective Services
~hil e r
B1ll 23 ts benefic1alfor men
and ....·omen
Rather than
re p ea l a lready exl st1ng
benefits for women . 1t ex ·
tends some new ones to me n .
~Is M1lle r sa1d
Assembly 811! 2:1 does not
force ~o~.·omen and g~rls to do
anythmg
It Will end the
pr oht bittOn against them
do1ng so meth1ng . 1f the y
choose
A great deal of the btU
tnYoiYes changms the word·
mg of the sta tu les
An
b) J\athy U'Conne.ll
A htt · a nd -run acc1dent
occurred m UWSP par long lot
P on J an 23 A 1970 Ma\'enck .
ICl't ·rear fender ~o~.· as dented
and damages were estimated
at 5-45
Twenty 111\l' d ollar s wa s
taken from 01 locked dresser .
1ns1dc a n unloc kc.-d room . m
Burrough:. Hall on J a n .23
A Seara·Arvm wa lch w1th
brass rtngs on a brown
It-ather band was taken from
n v. allt't that was kepi m a
hJt.' kt·r It .... as \'alued at $25
,\ purst• va lued at SI O, ~o~.·as
dl'otpj>t'(l undl'r the bll'acher ,
m Quandt tiym on J an :u
1\t. u hub~ap!t , valued at
Sl2 . "'-t.'rt• taken from ;t
'dude Jl.Ukt-d 111 lot Q on
J;Jn zr,
Th1rl t"t'll dollars ..,ai taken
fr om :1 ""allet of an unat
tendt-d j.Jc kct on Jan 'a Tht·
jacket hung on a cha 1r on the
tn1 rd floor of the Lea r nmg
l ~ourctos Center
l'OIIHntllt'l'S Penny G1llman
""·'' ap po1nted to
1Jrgan11allon llecog mlton
('omnuttw , Kns Mourn to the
Comm un i!)'
R elnt i o n s
romm1 llct• . and T e n')•
llarpl'r ""'a.lt appo1n t<.od to the
tlutn :ul Itt• la tions Commtltee
tn h1s proposal. llam1ll on
as kt.'d that Student GoYern·
mcn t ask the Day Care
Ccnler and the Uni\lers1ty
Center to c heck Into the
(>OSSi btlity of utilizing Text
Hc ntal and report their find ·
mgs as soon a s poss ible
•
Faculty evaluation
moves forward
h ,\ UtJh Kt·rk, it·t•k
l 'l.m, ~.tt•rt• form ula ttod at a
llh•t•tm..: Ft'l> I? to e\·alwltt•
,,IJ t · w~p t·ourSt:.os before the.·
t•nd uf tht• scm~ter Tht ~t
t'\,tiU.IIIUil"'-ll lbedone b) the
l:uur't' .1nd Fa c ulty
l-.\,tiU.JtiJifl Sub ·Comm ii!C(',
t'JJ t h:un·d b) Bill T1ce. a
.. tuth·nt ;md l.l Chllaranj:m ,
•' llll'llll.~t: r of the faculty The
' uh t' UIIIIllllll' e will use
, t.ualardtu·d
CYa luat 1on
ljlll''\IIHIIJI<J irt'S and a COm ·
putl'r
11w 'uh-1.·ornm 1tlet' , made
up ul 'tu~nl!t and fa c ulty.
tk.~· td t.-cl th;,t the C.'\18lua 11on
"" 111 lx· ""Titten pr1manly to
dl'tt·rmtn(• fa c ul ty com JX'It•nt:t• The tjtx'Stlonnatrt.'
'4hll'll halo not been fimshro :
"" 111 ,,1.,.1 con tatn qut.ost 1ons
dt'' 1K11 Cd to t.'Y3 Iu ate the
cuur~c.·
and gather 111 .
lur!n,ttmn about the s tudeniJii .
lu-<:hat r man 8111 Tice stud
th"t ht.'lp is nt.'Cdcd " We
'4uuld hk<> a representati\•e
fr um each dq>artmenl 50 ...,.e
t'" 11 d(•velop and administer a
cump rehen s 1ve question·
•la•rc.• We a lso need four or
h\' C.' JX.'Ople lo help w1th
cumputcr
progr ammmg "
T1ce est tm a ted the cost or a
cmn plete eva luation al $800 to
St ,000 The funds have not yet
lx."Cn acqui red .
Seven s tudeniS and 5 1X
fal..'ulty member s allendt.-d
tht.' meeting .
Enrollment
leveling
U WSP a pp ears to be
s napping il.s enrollment
decline and probably will
le\'el oH " somewhere: bet ·
ween 7,200and 7.300" this fall .
acco rd i ng to Reg ist r ar
Gtlbert Fa ust.
As or thi s month , data
poinlltowa rd a 1 ,375figure for
this fall . Faust believes It will
be possi ble to maintain ap·
proximately that level for the
next few ye ars .
In recent years, there have
been larger graduatin g
c.luses than Incoming fresh·
men c lasses. That trend also
Is coming_to an end ,
•
Februar~
21 , 1974
'Words are weapons!'
•
by :O.h~\'ollruh
On W('dncsday , Feb . .6,
noted black journalist, radio
\'Oiceandvoiceagainstblac k
opplflsion, LuPalmcr, "told
it like it is." The address,
prese nted at the Collins
Oassroom Center , was given
inconjunctionwiththe fourth
annual Black CUlture Week,
sponso r ed by the Black
Student Coalition.
Palmer, who has completed
.,.,.ork on his Ph.D. in mass
communications, is editor of
The Hlac k E:s prus , a
newspaper for , about and
prcxluced by blacks. He 5aid
he gave up a $25,000 a yea r
job as columnist for the
(.'hic:ago Daily News because
hecouldn'treac htheblack
societythrOUihawhiteman's
mouthpiece. "All the editor
had to do was to cirde my
ideas with a blue pen and Lu
Palmer didn 't h.ave anything
to say," he said.
In keeping with Black
Cultur e Week 's theme of
"Save the Children ," Palmer
saidthat,'lhenewdaymust
beblackyouth · blac;kyouth
must be the new dily · and
there MUST be a ne~~~o· dayt ..
Palmer. noting that there
arefewblacksontheSte\'t'ns
Point campus. asked how
many blacks were on the
faculty Whe n told that then!
were just two, he said,
'1'hat'stypicai . Thenatureof
any white unh·ersity Is to
oppress black folks ." This
wa5 to keep the "American
system" strong.
Palmer compared what he
called the " American
system ," to the freeway
systems of his hometown
Olicago. All the expte$SIIIo·ays
feed into the "loop" o f
Olicago. The "loop", w tum,
f't1)re:sented the " American
system :· All the freeways
feeding into Chicago a r e
comparabletotheinslitutioits
which support the "American
system." Palmernotedttlatil
was ironll! that all the
Ollcago freeways are named
alter whites and that few
realize that a black man
founded Olicago. "All that's
named after him is a high
school and an alley ," said
Palmer .
Palm e r said that the
" American system" is
synonymo us with a
eapitalistic Ont' . The system
hastwoguals. ''To make a
minds. If ptOpie knew what
the system was really like .
they wouldn't Sland for it"
"Mass communication is
the clu Tier of the social
process . ''" Palmer cited
movies as the system's at·
temptto,"control the minds
ofthenewday-blackyouth,''
Movies like Sha ll and Super
t-' l y give b l ack youth
something to Identify with,
butitisonlywl\;!t"theman"
\llo"antstoseehimidentiry~~~o; t h
THE PO INTER
Palmer
~~hpooreducation , he
against the philosophy of
" learn to earn" because with
it comes the idea that one
needssuchthln_gsasstatus
symbols. " When you ge t in
debt tryi ng to own Coupe
de
Villes and spllt·level
houses, you gel into debt a nd
rurmng ms attention to
the)llacks tudentsatSte\·ens
Pomt , Palmer said, "Spend
lime lea rning ," Blacks
s hould go through
the
sys tem and pull out the things
they need, and then take ttlat
knowledge to the ghetiO!I
"because ...·eneedyouthere."
In reference to the white
faculty, Pa lmer said, " After
he'~ messed over your mind
inclass ... hedoesn' texpect
you to go out and (lnd the
truth."
The policy of a white
Wli\·ersity Is to " get a quota
tofblacksl·runtheminand
run them out," said Palmer .
"Understand what you are
educa t inR youseH for , "
Palmer said . J le cautioned
bec:omesttlemostlmportant
thing." When black people
"learntoearn," theyt.Kome
worthless to t he b lack
community .
Spcakillll to the blacks in
the audience, Palmer said
thataftertheygraduate,they
should, "Reach back and
teachone. Biack folkstlave to
educate black folks."
Pa l me r advised the
audience to"closethedoor"
when thev 11.01 home and to
"lookinthemirror ," thenask
of themselves. " Where do I
stand in this fight? What am I
doinR at this Universitv?" .
"Look In you r mirror ,"
Palmer said. "Look in your
eye. Ask yourse lf · Where am
I?"
anything . The American
~ystem mu~t have an under
classsothattheupperclass
can w;~ llow in luxury ." The
r\ merican
e d ucationa l
sy~tcm perpetuates blacks In
theroleoftheWlderclass
"pushers", "pimps" and
"studs" ,sald Palmer.
Every weekend lo Chicago,
blackkids"clrdetheblocks"
around movie houses to see
filmssuchasShall andSupt> r
Fly, said Palmer. Those kids
spend$J, whiehgoesintothe
pocke15of whitemen . Inthe
sa me process, they are
having their minds con·
trolled. These types of rilms
also result in " a bunch of
Super Flies" whorunoutto
buy' 'Superflyclothes ." This
operation of mind control is
what the American system
wanu. "They' re arrald to let
young blacks turn into men.
1
ind ;~~!n~~ t~':::i~f::rit~! They want them to stay just
males.'' said Palmer .
~~~;t·;ollingthe minds of The educational sys tem has
the people" is what caused a "captive audience," said
Palmer to leave the Palme r . " While a person
Chi cago Da il y News , he mayhavetoattendschoolby J . Due da te foc- budgets will
said. " I saw ~~~o· hat whites lawuntilhe 's l6, tha t d~'t beFeb. ZZ, t974. 11earingswill
....·ere trying to out into black mean that they really lear n begin Man:h 1.
2. Committee decided to hea r
budget requests and make
decisionsassoonaspossible
upon r?Juesl. Any disput es
bet~~~o'Rn activity request and
committee fl'Commendation
Question , Do you think tenure has ~~~oill be taken up at Senate
meelingatthetimeofbudget
approval.
had a positive or negative effect
J. Hearings an! scheduled :
February 2:6
4 p .m .· tllm Society · will be
o n the quality of you r professors?
self-sustainingllt'xtyear . ¥.111
prese nt only anticipated
revenue amount and ad·
mission cost for students and
t~i ~ensberg , off'(:ampus.
non-students .
" I th in k right now it 's
March 2 .. Debot Center
ha \' lng a negative e ffeet
Meeting Room
beea~ teachers are not
9:30a.m. Cbl!erleaders
beingevaluatedonhowgood
10 a .m
En v ironmental
they are .. .it also makes
Council
people a lillie lazy becauSe
10 : 30 a .m
Women's In ·
onceyouachievetenu:reyou
tramurals
don't have to do as much ... "
11 a .m . TV Production
I p.m . Black Student Coalition
Da\·e F1etcher . off'(:ampus.
sophomore :
" l thmk probabl y negath·e.
because tenure caUSt'S the
i n.~truct or to go O\'er and over
somtthing that he doesn't
ha\•eto. andbeforeheeven
tellsthemherllpectsthemto
know it too ... "
~~~o·henyougetindebt,yourjob
FAC schedules
budget hearings
POINTER PODIUM
•
Page 5
1:30 p.m . AIRO
2 p .m . Universily Writers
}.ta r ch J .. De bot Meeting
Room
J2 noon Debate
1: 30 p.m. Student Govern·
men\ !Hockey Presentation I
2: 15p.m . Radio Station
March 5 .. Van Hi se·
University Center
4 p.m. Activities and ID
4:30 o.m . Dav Core Center
Sp.m. Women 's Athl etics
March 16- Communications
Room· University Center
9 a .m . Arl!l & Lectures
10 a .m. University Theatre
II a.m. Music Activi ties
1 p.m _ Pol n t~r
2 p.m . UAB
March 17- Communlutions
Room · University Center
12 noon Men 's lntramurab
1 p .m. New Requests
March 19 .. Van H ise·
University Center
4 p .m. lntl!rcolleglate Sports
5 p .m. Open Requests
Nancy Moss
Nancy Moss. off-<:ampus,
sophomore :
" lt 'sso hardtoaaybecause
e\'l!ry teachl!r 's difftrt"nt.
Be<:ause of the cutbacks we
are losing a lot of good young
tcachl!r.s who have only bee,n
AI Crovoder. off-<:ampus. grad
student :
" lthmk lt's hadapositi\·e
effectmgeneral . 11 ~~~o'Ould
tend to stabilize a depa rt·
ment . which has some ad·
\'antagn ·and some disad·
vanta.aes.''
Bob Kung , ofr ·c ampu s.
sophomore :·
" I think I t ' s
negative ... some of t he
teachers! Mow don 't really
careaboutteac::hin&anymore
because they know they11
havetheir jobsnext yur .. ."
'
AI Crowder
Midwest Population Center
(312)644-3410
\OOE.ascOhlo
Chbgo, lllnob;60611
Anon·poJ..cwgan~~.allon
Bob Kung
Page 6
THE POINTER
February 21 , 197 4
Tenure, a many splendored thing?
by )1:ari Kuru:c - skJ
procedures afte r ad\·erse
Admilledly . tenure has not admtmst r atave act aon has
cbsmissed all the poor In · be-en taken
Today . tenure
st ructors and-or retained a ll
under
oups
the good ones. but 1t's beuer attack by 3 num!K;_t o
to have ten ure than to ha\·e no for a numbe
protection at a ll . said many O'tttctsm ha c
from the
mstructors when asked to student . \lo'h ts frustrated
comment on the tenure wtth ht s f3tlure to obtai n
ed ucat tona l reform J im
system.
Essentially. teacher tenure ll amtlton. studenr ·govern law s. also ca lled fa1r ment prestdent , ts one who as
dasm•ssal o r continUing disenchanted wath the present
contract la\lo'S, provide for tenure sys te m . Ham tlt on
continui ng employment for st11d . " In present tenure
teachers after com pletion of l'onside r ation. those who
probalionar)' service. Con· think along the same lines
Linued professional g r o'olo•th is and those that don't cause
a prerequis ite to being 'fnct ton'
a re us u ally
awarded tenure sta tus .
awarded tenure ." Ha milton
Generally. four dtsmissal pomtL'<i out admi ni strative
laws s pecify causes for problems and said, " It apdismissal and reqwre that the pears people <teachers ) have
charges be substantiated by been released on a 'las t mev1dence ~1 os t sl.:lte laws fir~t out' basis " He feels this
name incompetency . tn · ts ··due to reluctance or
subordination .
melfic•ency people tn the va rious
and neglect of duty as reasons departments to set critena
for dism•ssal In contrasl. and take responsibility of
some laws say ··for cause" or r eleas tn g ot her tenured
faculty "
" for good and JUSI cause ··
Uamtlton seemed most
Recent s•gmficant changes
tn state tenure la'lt'S ancludc Wstu rbcd about the fact tha t
tmproved impartml hearing there ts "rea lly no present
tnbunals . im proved due student votce in the tenure
process proce dure s and evaluatton system ." He said,
" Any lime si ngle -facto r
tt!: ana lysts sys tems a re used.
non -tenured teacher. lengthy the system is wrong ."
On the other hand . Carol
and expensi\'e federal court
action ts orten required to Ma r ion stud , she "is hesitant
obtain a teacher 's right to fa ir to place In the hands or
:~~::~:~ftes:'c~~,;_·~~~
In rt>Sponse to a question
s tudent~ the rl'SponMblltt~ of
grant1ng tenure and about recent lay-offs. Ms .
dtsml.slttng tenured facult) " ~l anou pomted out . '1'he
mlltal difference between
~I s Manon ~~ of th(• llts tory
Department . and sta te betng latd -oH and beang
secret.lr\ ofT A U W F .ll ht.• d1:-.mt~ed 1s that charges are
Assoc tation or Unt\CrSII)' of brought agamst the teacher 1f
dt s m1ssed .. When one ts
\ \ 11sconsm FaC'ulty 1 Manon.
" la1d -off. there isn' t a
(t O defense of th e tenun.'
sys tem 1 prefers "peer negative judgment " against
Judgement .. and can see th<' teacher lie has the "first
"majors m thC p;ttltcular clmm on an opening in the
department as ha\'tng some. department The te nure
bu t limited vo1cc." because syste m doesn't provide for
" they are not equa ls .. .in the fuwncia l exige n cy, the
knowledge of the discipline " enro llm e nt drop was not
She feel s " students are nn t1 c1pated ."
"Tenure may ha \·e ceased
limited to the classroom ."
Ms. Ma n on, spea king ror the to h.1\'C meaning, " said Ms .
His tor y Department sa td , Marion. '1'enure once served
"years ago. the possession or as a protection of academic
a Ph .D was used as a baste freedom aga1nst socia l
criteria People are awarded pressures," but now. "in a
tenure for add1tional reasons. t1me of greater tolerance.
for exam ple . 'c la ss r oom- tenure may have ouUived its
teaching abtlity ' , their usefulness."
I n describing what
·scholarship' tcontr1buttons
to the f1eld , such as research , llamtlton cons tders an ideal
pubhcallons ) "Other cnteria tenure system. he said.
"
Graduat1ng
senio r s.
m1ght be the e\•1dence of
graduate students and faculty
mten..-st m the departmenl
111 a parttcular department
" f-~or exa mple . helpang run
the unl\'ers1ty 1n affatrs or \lohere 1t apphes . shouJd be
cur r1 cul u m.
degree abll· to vote 111 matters of
reqwrements , also tus or her award1ng tenure and
\loillingness and lhe way 1n releasmg tenured faculty on a
wh1ch he ca rnes out h1s 'one vote--one person' basis
Th1 s would · elimina t e
work"
Ham1l ton
sa1 d , po pul a ri ty co nt es ts a nd
"teal'hers tpee r s 1 know votmg heresay t--acuHy in a
another teacher's credentia ls depa r tment shou ld be experts
but they don 't kllO\Io' tus ab1 hty and shou ld be select i n
to ~o:et h1s malcnal across " awardutg tenure Students
To 1-lanulton's rccoll ct iiOn. !irc) rauu ng to be expert s 111 a
he h as "ne ,•er see n a p1lrt 1c ular dtSC ipltne No
professor e\•a luatmg another :-..l'ntor wants hts departm ent
professor 's teal.:htng ab1ltl y m In be cnppiL'd by 'half-witts'
B) the It me one ts a semor m
th(' classroom sttuahon "
3 department. he shou ld be
:~~~~,\~or;c~~~~te expertise.··
ouu~ r :argumrniJi ag•lnst
trn urr • Invalid'!
One argument aga1nst
tenure is tha t it gives
teachers greater job security
than other groups of employees possess . As a matter
of fact. te nure proleclion Is
s 1milar to job sec urit y
provi sio ns o f labor management contracts in the
private sec tor and to civil
ser vice regul ations, which
p r otec t oth e r employees .
Furthe rmore, the period of
probation for a ll teachers far
exceeds the norma l period of
proba ti on for other kinds or
workers .
Other opponents argue that
these statut es, once adopted ,
cannot eas ily be changed .
Ho'olo•ever , contrary to cur rent
publicity agai nst tenure . a
num ber of s tates ha\•e made
changes requiring better
procedural provisions .
Pe rhaps th e m os t lm -
•
!,7rt~n"~:r~~nio"td~0 :~~~~
\lo'elfare of the student and hi s
nght to educational oppo rtuntty . Every s tudent
should ha\•e the r ight to h<we
teachers who a re able and
who are fn.o.e or the fcur of
arbit rary and unfair trea tment.
"Thcrearconly about three
or four ·mcompetcnt' tenured
teac hers on th iR ca rnpus .said
llumilton . " te nure didn ' t
l'rea te the mcompctency but
rathcr . tt was awa rded to the
\lo'rong people "
Faculty contests lay-offs
1n.1t the la~.of!s of the SIX
·· Th e
com m 11 tee's
·'PPl'oJhnK faC'uJI~ members tatcml'nts a lso 1mply th.1t
b..· rt·c.:on:-.1dcrcd
I also money appropriated by the
.. uggt'!'ltl'd that " ttK> \lohole h:gislature lor new bwldlllgs
tk'L' I~torHnalung process 110 coul d have been Wverted mto
ttw ... 1:1tt• uru,· ers lt~ system 1 facul ty or personnel fwuts
nt'l'dll l'Xan11nat10n and Ne1thcr I nor the Board o!
rcthtnkmg "
Hegents has that authority
Tt•nur{'(i fa culty members
" With regard to the com ·
Mt· h:nmg property rights tnlltee's expressed view that
l:tkt·n a~o~.ay by offi cials who the " present a rra ngement of
·•rt.• ·rollowmg orders.· the nottces and a ppea ls" does not
Commtllee wh1ch held the rt•vt(·w group contended
provide 'either due process or
hcarmgs , stated 111 1t.s C'On
t'hancellor Dreyfus sta ted proof of fiscal necessity .' I
eluding report to the Chan · Ill h1s letter of reply to the rettera te that these matters
cellor . that lay-off or tenured commtttec that he concluded can be determined onJy by
faculty should on ly be un
the report d1d not establish a those authorJlies with the
dertakcn as a l.;~st alternalt\'t' lack of ev1denc~ to support com petence to d~al wit h
and then only ""'hen a " fi SC'al
thclay-oHdeetSion. '"There1s them ," Dreyfus wrote .
CtlSIS eXISts"
no doubt that tn M3)' . 1973,
Dreyfus admi tted that the
Th e commtllee charged c the date o f the lay~H executive budg~t was not cut
that the admmtstratton has noli ficattons J. thts urm·erSity dolla r -w s~ when fa c ult y
1
not sattsfactortly pursued all
facrd a fiscal cnsts , and slill mem bers were notified of layother altemat1ves and that 11 doc-s on th1s date "
off
But he contended the
had presented no C\'ldencc
Dreyfus. appea r ed to primary reason for th is was
thai such a cnsts ex1sts
dJsagree With the faculty the additiOn Of (WO lenLU'ed
" Someone or so ml· group's contenhon that his faculty members Into the
group . " the comm1ttee sa1d m
admJnlstra tJon had not extcutive olnce on a part ·
tiS r eport. "Is maktng
decl stons about s t ate pursued all other alternatives time basis In order to assure
pr10rtt1es wh1ch r egard
co ntractual obhg att ons to
tenured fa cuJty as secondcommittee's
s tatements con tem plating civil court
ary ."
Cha r ges conce rnm g the }'"~'edt, " that all ~n~lary action as a result of Dreyfus '
absence of an exec ut1vc ~~o~c s ouJd be ehm mated · re s pon se to the: Reconbudget c ut an d allegi n g ar~ lai/~~fr_.!enured facult y ~!:::r~tion Com mitt ee's
arbitrary standa rds 10 the
Th is IS an unrealis lic
Memben of the commltlee
selec tion of lay-off faculty
were also le\·eled tn the: approa.ch 0 to the fi scal were: Richard Ackley
report.
::'f:!~!~~ ~r~r:Yun~t~; chairman; AJberl HurlJ:
On the: basis of these find - un lve nlty .. h
RuaeUNe:bon,HelenCornell ,
ings, the committee asked
e wrote ~~~~~·an~·~.:;rdM~::e:~~
the committ~.
•
Appeal heartng s for
t(•nured facult y destg_nat(-d
for lay-off next )ear haH·
res ult ed m charges and
counte r -cha rgl' S from ad
m1mstratton and facult)
sources about the nt.'CCSSit)
and method of the lay-ofl
FiJ'~It~an~=~~~s~~~~:!~
~a~I;:..,c:~~·r:~ '::,•r,: ~:~mri~~~~~~~~~~f~!f·~~~
The Jlajned glasa remains of a once:
be:autifuJ Old Ma in sti ll m ai ntains iU
intricate grace: and beauty
•
Februa ry 21, 1974
Survival of the tenured
THE POINTER
Page 7
Administration responds to tenure issue critics
•
•
m~nls hu not <b-opped and 1s
st ill grow•nJ Within a
cused of dism•uing quality
1100-tenured faculty to :.vo1d
dep;utment .
the legal diHkulties ln voh•ed
non·lt'nured
lacully ha\'t' btt'n layed oH
first , before tenured, unless
the non-tenured penon had
some sp«hd competence or
sk•llthaiJUSIIfiedgivinghim
pnor1ty .
l'oln tu : Why hin•en't non -
__ tenured _lacultr been given
anyconSideraiiM ?
ll ~lt'r btocbr : Non-tenured
facultymembenhave~n
gh•en conslde rallon in
departments .,.·here 11 was
n«~sary to ~ontl nut . their
se rv1cn. but we ha~ ~
IIL\'enCentral Administration
and locallluidelines th~t ~Y
we must try to ma•nUun
tenured fa~ully .
t•uintu : Can the unh·ersity
dismiu t e nured faculty
!~ally~
by Mary Ruddr
tt alrrbKkfr : 1 am not
The trnure Jaw on ~am pus aware tha t there hu been a
has become an area of con- general facult y attack on the
cem for the administration. ~~o•ay the budget has been
tenu r ed and non -tenured handled . The fa~u lty a nd
faculty and students Due to admmistration would have
llafnbnktr : Thl."re is
some difference of opimon to
the leg;IILty of dism•ssing
tenu r ed fat<ulty . The
Ass-ociation of Unl\"l."rsity of
Wisconsm t-·~ully ITAUWF"l
os cNLllengmg tills 1n the
("OU rt s . Cen tr31 Ad·
mtmstntion con tends that no
cuurt 11 likely to r~uire
continuing people when the
work f?r which they "'"ere
h~red ts nu longer h_ere .
E\·entually 11 wtll be dectded
dt'partments have ~n layed cannot defend as large a
off despite the law ~~ohkh facul tyas .,.·ehadwtthadrop
suppnsedly pc'O(COCIS them In of 2.000 students.
other depoartmeniS. tenurrd
t'uint..r · Whatcriteriahave
~~ty q=l~~ed~~~el::::= ~~~Y~'OU:; :,ec:m=
tenured faculty Nils been
upheldwhereitiafinanchllly
n«essarv to do 50
Poin t er :
The ad mtmstration has bftn ac-
Gordon Hoferbecker
irr!'lanlless ol tenure and
non -tennure s tatus . would
that be advantageous to the
mthedism1ssalofthetenured W1h·ersity~
r.mks. lsthistrue'!
llalubeckt r : ltmight\'ery
llalf'ri!Kkrr : I am sure .,.-cllbeadvantageoustothe
!hat in somt• cases we h:l\'t' univenity h.1d there been
had to dism1ss quality non· !10me way of Ulling quality
!enured faculty in order to e''aluations Weha••e to faee
rel.ainperiOiuoftt'nurerank
thef:~ctthatthereisa t t'nure
and many people. t'\'en some la"''.thatagreatmanyofour
rolleagues. may rh ink the facultyareprot~ttd hy it,
non-tenuredlayolfpersonhlls andthtshas tobetakeninto
bctterteachingqualiric:lllons act<ou ru in ou r decisions. We
than the ten ured pel'$0n who knew thl're would be court
is being retained .
ehallenges. so .,.-e had to
We have no 'I'll)' to avoid kt'i!p OUT dcdsions as ob·
this happen lnll aud \ ' et Y ,eeth•c as possible
li kel y it has happened
l'"intrr : Are you still in
because of the weight the favo r of the tenurt' law
c nteri a used plat<td on despite all these dlffkultles
tenure
andll'galproblems?
We did not make our
n .. lerbecktr : Yes. I think
decisions on thl." basis ot 0\'l'rnll the tenure program
supposed d1Uerencn in the Nils more advantages tNLn
qualitv of tea~hing because disadvantages and I .,.-ould
we t"ned to make our not hketo seetbeten\A"elaw
decisions on objec t1v e abolished.
stan<brds.
l' uin ter: What ;are these
l'ointu : Why hasn't there ad\'3ntagH~
been any student Input in
ll alerbrckrr : One main
deciding "''hich tea~her• .,.;u rt'3500 thl." tenure program
bedismissed~
.,.·assetupwastnpc'oteetthe
lla lrrbKkrr : l\IO:!It ("r iterla acackmtc freedom of fa culty
mvo/ved are objective and members 10 they could be
there was no room for quality critit<al of Institu tions and
1'\'aluation or Individual individuals. Under II they
facul ty members eitht' r by coud n "t be dismissed for
s tudent s or coll egaues . freedom of expression.
The sec ur i t y tenure
pr ovides may e nable a
faulty member and ~~o·h('n faculty mrmber to eondcterminingsalo rylnc reases ccr•trateonhisstudl."ntsand
for them.
teaching to an ex tent !Nit
J>oint«;.J If the criteria '"'OUldbe le;spoul blelfhis
uodudcd quality of teaching, pos uion ~~o·ert' less secure
r::u~~~~~ac~rt~g~~ ~~~~ ::!ted~!' =~~e~~!:ub~t~ :::~:.~~ ri~~,':!~~;~~ ~~:n::cid\~~ti~:s ,!~~r~~
··~:..'::'~':.:.'".,:;:.:: ;;~,;;;:;
the l'ointl' r questioned Vice·
Chance ll or of At<ademic
Affatrs, Gordon llafe-rbecke-r.
on the con trover sia l
tnequahll u and legalities
m•·tJh•ed to the ISSue
l'nintu : The chanct'llor"s
admtntsl r ll tt on h.u bt>en
ac<"us.rd of not loolun& at all
the al ternat ivu available
bdn re dlsmtssing tenu red
faculty Tenure cnhcs point
<OUI that programs and faulty
h;H•cbt.-encutbeforeother
~rras , mcludlng the adnunistntion Do these accLI5ilttOIIS h.1veany va l idity~
llaf•rhrt kl' r : No, I believl."
~~o·ehavelookedat e•·erythlng
111 the budget to see what cuts
mtghl be pau1 ble It LS not
poli5lbletoellmmate3.11 nontenurtd fat<ulty or expe115eS
such as matertab aod suppltu and s till have a
Uf\1\ff~ly
We ha•'t cut exti.'OSI\"ely 1n
ad m•n•stra h\·e budaet One
rea50rlp;&rtoflhe chan«llor's
budget did nol dechne IS
ht"Causeheabsorbed twohalf·
lime po~~i llon~ in order to
ret:nn t"'·o tenured faculty
lr<lfnGto:iell We hovecutthe
,.dmtn iSt ratLon in these
area s the Co llegr o f
l'rofi.'SliiOfHII Studies, the
d~teoctor of Arts and l.l!ctures
!rum full to half timt', a
numberofannualpa!!tltonsto
academtcyt'aTpoliLhons, and
ehmmated the Office of In!lhlulional Rnearch u of
July t
l'oln ter : Does the administration feel thi! il: an
area pii:ked for attack
because the faculty is angry
!Wet losing their jobs~
''""'' •oold"
tlalu bffke r : We used
cntena that ha d been given
u!l by th e Ce ntral Ad ·
mmLslratfon and some that
"'-ere locally determined by
the chancellor after t< on·
su llation wtlh the ad·
mLniSlrahon.
Those critena gh·en us
oncluded semority . need for
faculty member's servkes.
and academic prepoa rat ion.
meaning whether or not he
1\:ldadoctorate.
l.ncally. it was determi ned
that facult y member$ would
be retamed "''hose servin>s
were mO:!It necessary to the
mamlenan-ce of curri~ular
prll(lfams This meant if two
persons m1ght be layr<t off.
butonec:ould lt'achaspec:tal
courw, he could be retamed
lor that reason .
If t...·o pei"SOI\5 constdered
for layoff we r e equall)"
qualiht'd, rank was also
cunsidered. For eumple. an
instructor .,.·ould belayed off
before an assistant professor.
l'ninter: Has the-re e\'er
been any de\' tation from
these criter ta ~
llalerb«ker : Tothebestof
our knawlcdge we hne not
de\'tated from these criteria .
In indtvLdual eaii."S we m~-~51
use our JUdgment on "'hat
thesepn~ntsmelln
J',.in tf'r : What eon ·
soderation . if any . ha•·e the
nun-ten\A"ed faculty members
~ given~
llalubecku : Non-tenured
faculty may be rel.atned in
some departments while
tenurrd faculty ha•·e ~~~
layed off in other$ because
enrollment in some depa rt·
External degree program discussed
by Jranlr Swa,- n,
Thl." E!lternal Degree
Pr-otram was diKussed at
the Academ ic Affairs
Committee meetin& on Feb
11 . An~xte-rnaldegreetsnot
conlingent on a st udent"s
pc'estnce on cllmpus He is
eu.luated on hts competi."IK'e
tllthet thlln on l_he basis of
coursesandcrl."dtts.
student v.ill be able to get
exactly what he wants
Community resources can be
utili_zed . For example. a
m~J_or i_
n fine .arts lid·
mtrustra!Jon now tm·oJves a
double major. one in business
administration and another In
001." of the fine artJ. Under
this procram ll student "''OUid
major in one of the fine uts
Anextemaldegtffis tailor
made for the Individua l applying for thedt'JI't>e,and
in\·o l ves ex t.endlng an
exlstingdt'JI't>e,notcreating
a new one. In tills way the
workmg m a mUSC!um or a
program ~imi l ar lo UWSP 's
Arts and Lectures Series
Content of a s tud e nt 's
program "'·ould be dett' r·
mined by a committee
and~;ain~racticalexper lence
Proposals ha••e bt'en made
toofferanl."xtemaldegreeln
four majors in UWSP. These
in t< lude paper scient<e,
e lementary
education,
rtsOla"Ce management tn the
Nlltural Resour~e Ot'part ment and u rly childhood
edut<atton in the llome
&onormcs Deputment
The committee paned
motions approvinll a reques t
that UWSP be included tn
UW-Oshkosh"s txlt' rn al
dt11 ree propO:!Ial and that the
four UWSP proposa ls for
e~ternal degrees be sent to
Central AdminlstraiHJfl
DIAMOND RINGS BY
ORANGE BLOSSOM
KEEPSAKE
BELOVED
COLUMBIA
KAYNAR
COSMIC
'DIAMONDS OUR SPECIALTY'
COME IN AND SEE OUR
DIAMONDS IN COLOR
GREEN - CANARY - BURNT ORANGE
DIAMOND IMPORTERS
CHECK OUR PRICES
GR U BB A J EWELE RS
Me MAIN nat iT
STIVfN S I'OINT, WIS. 5441 1
rHOHl 171S ) )44.7121
THE POI NTER
Page 8
February 21, 1974
---------Job Interviews Dates Set--------All semors a nd grnduf1le5
are urged to take advantage
and sign up for the follo...,ing
interviews by contac ting the
Place ment Cen te r. 106 Main
Buildmg . a t their earliest
con"·eniencc
Literatu r e
conce rmn g thf' com pan ies
li sted below IS available in
our pl acement library a nd
should be rend 10 preparation
for your mtcr v1e w . Atti re for
placement mtt.•rv1ews should
consist or a coa t a nd tic or an
appropnatc dress
Frb . :!J. Ff'drn l Ch ·il
Srn icr Ent nnc r Exa n1 ..,.,;u
bc gh·en on cam pus 10 the
Scu~ncc BUIIdmg . Room A-121
fr om s ·JOa m to t2 noon. Al l
m tc r estcd s tu de nts p lease
s1 gn up for the exam in the
Pl acement Offi ce . 106 Main
Bui ld ing. and p1t'k up the
necessary a ppl1 cat ion
booklet
Questions on th is
exa m should tx- d1rected to 1·
800·2U ·9 t91 . a toll fr ee
number 10 ~h lwaukce
F r b . !G. ~ 111r~~o, Horbuc k
a nd ('om pan)' . Skuklr . Ill. All
ma j o r s t se n 1o r s 1 i nt e r es ted i n position s in r e·
tail manag e men t and
cataiOR management
Ff' b . !i , G lll r lt P u blic
:o<hoo&s . Gi ll f' U, \\1s . ....;n be
on cam pus mterv1e...,,ng from
9 am · 4 p m \ 'aca ncles:
Gr ades 2. J, 6 1prcfer math
background I, Jr High m a th .
\l a rch I a nd 5, P ackaging
o l Am e ri ca,
All majors .
('urporatiu n
t;, an !lton , lll.
~~~J~t~l.y fo:P~i~~i~n~~
sales. ma r ketmg , accountmg .
and productaon management
~ br c h
S. Emplo_\ f' t !l ln ul Wa usa u . W:a usa u.
WI !> . All majors · es peci a lly
in liberal arts or busi n . ,
sys t em s. mathem a t ics
com pu ter
sc
b.:u:kground
P 1·
wutcr'oi.Titers m
e a rea or
group , property and casuall y
msurance and s uch posihons
do r ~Uire mdividuals open
on loc:at10n . Systems jobs will
bt.' loca ted in home o ffi ce at
Wa usa u.
~b rc h 5, Sa ga Food Srr \lct', Ka lam azoo. ~tl c h . AJI
busmess r elated ma jors
~ l arch 5. ltac inr
Pu blic
School!~ , lbcine, Wis. w1ll be
on ca mpus in terviewing from
9a m · 4 p m Vacanci es : K6 . H o m e Ec . Library .
Sc 1cncc. Bu s iness Ed uc .
Garis J>hy · must ha\·e health
nunor & WS I. Sp ec 1al
Educnt1on . Math and Ge ne ral
Sc1ence
.\ l:tn ·h G. ~1an i t o \I. OC: Publi c
Schouh . 1\l a nito wO<'. \\'h ..
w111 be o n ca m pu s i n ·
tcn'ICWing fr om 8 a .m . · 4
p.m Vacancies : Jr . Hi gh
Ar t . Bu s in ess E d ucation.
F'renc h . German . English .
hbranan. G~rl's Phy Ed .
general sc ie nce. psychology,
broadfi eld social studies
)la rch 11. Mea d CCM'poratlon.
O:.yt on , Ohio. All pulp and
paper scien ce graiiuates and
fores t r y m ajors for position s
in enginee r i n g . pa p e r
sa les men and foresters.
~l:a n· h 11. 1:! , l l . a nd 11. l '.
~ . ~l :uinr Corps . Al l maJOr S
.\ la rch ll . ln tr r nal H t' \ t' II UI'
S1·n it· r .
All maJors
1.-:..JX~ I ally 111 busmess and
at·c•Juntmg
Position of Ill ·
~~oura m: r
WHAT COULD BE
MORE DELICIOUS
THAN A CREAMY SHAKE
AND SOME CRISPY FRIES?
te r nal re,·enuc agent reqUire-s
;Ill 3l'COUOtlllg lll :l j Or , all
uthcr posit lOll!> requare only a
t.'olle!!C dl•g r l'l'
,\ tarch
( ;i m ~·b .
12 .
Ap·
Ail IIHIJOr~
C'COI\Oinlt'S Ill
f;astuon ml'rc handl !llllg for
pOS I I I OilS Ill re t ail
jlkluu , Wb .
l.'Sp(.>(.' laiJ)' h\JIIll'
management
programs
tra1n1ng
Ma r c h I J.Socla l S~<' url ty
Ad m in is tr a t io n , Wiscons in
Ha pi d s. \\h . A ll major s
mteres ted tn t·a r ee r op portu mtu~s ""llh th~ federal
government
~ l:.arch 11. Sprf'd Qurrn .
!Up on . \\ b .
All
bUSIIICSS
adm nu st rat 1011 and speec.:h
maJors fo r pos111ons 111 servicc·salcs ma nagement .
~ l arl'll tl . Uun a nd Ur:~ d ­
... tn•t• l. Grt'r ll U:n. \ \ b . All
bus~ncss rclatl'tl ina tors
~ l arch 13, IW
·Iui t P ublic
School!.. lk loit. \\ h... ..,.,,JI be
un ca mpus 1nten·lew1ng from
b~· Linda ll and~~ockr
What 's the newt.-st thmg an
res1dent hall sta ff!~"' For thl"
answer. one on ly has to look
:11 ll ansen ll all . thc exI>CTuttent al dor m on cam pus .
llnns ('n 1s an UjlJ>er-di\'IStomli
1~ o ph omo r es . JUni ors an d
loCmors 1. mumnall y super ·
\ ISl'd 1 f our He!lldent
A~SISI.Jill~~o
• HA~ I.
an
A~l!>tant D1rt't'lor 1 AD • 3nd
... Dl rC'Ctor 1 t.'U(.>tl rc~1dcnct>
hall Th1 ~ Sl'llll'~~otl·r. ho\I.C\'l'r .
t .... u add iiiOiltiJ !olaf! 1XISI\ 1011S
""l'rl' ('re<ll l'cl at ll an sen
llo u ~111g h a:-. t•mplu~t'<l t\1. 0
ll all!ll'll rl'~•dt•fltlo
Tom
Krueger and Jat·k :O.lagt•!>tro.
•• .-. t·urnculurn l'I.Mirdm:IIOr "
ur rt·~Jdenct· h.di prugram·
mt.·rs
:\!) prugr anuncr... Krut•~t·r
and ~ l agl'~lru art• •• ha~n
between all .. r llh· lol' f\' ll'('lo
and fat'Jilta·:- ufft•n·d h\ lht•
UJII\ {'rSit} . and thUM' :O.l'r~ ll'l':o>
.md filnhtl('lo dt•:-Jrt<d b\ thl'
na·n and \I.OJnt•n "( thr
res1dcnt·c hall Amunlo( tht·lr
.trt•
.l l'l'Oil\ pl1 ~~~ mt· nl..
t·~to.~blashtng
h·ttt·rht·:•d
"l.tl luflt·n for lht· h.dl .md
·•rr;wgr 'ng fur " ll •'•lk••r ..
Ull(•n•:-.1:-.
l' rt'lot· nll~
lht·~
pn~ratnllllll~ .ut lllh·r
h.11l formal ulht-r p;Jrllt'' .and
... .. tudenl · fat·ult~ t·••fft't'htiU'>('
111 tht· lohb~ dur111~ ;If
lt'rn•JoOII!I Tilt' pn•~r.unmt.•r ..
olrt'
~·~H~~.~~·
At
~ghsh , broadri eld . history
thl:-. ILI1Il' wL' do not kno""' whn t
tl~t· v:u:nnt'ICS will bt•
~ l an· h 11 a nd 15, U. S.
' ·•' ' All majors
\l ~r d 1 11. r\c't na Li fr ~n d
t ,.~,ua lt \ tn:. ura nct- . t:l t' n
or politica l science and a
5 pm \'a ranctcs
111
t-: lhu . ·Il l.
All busmess
prufl~:.~unal
bUSIIICSS car('(•r
111 .~juD or hb<'ra l a r ts
~A1 th
w h •rt·:t ll<l ror pos lll ons ns
nwrkctlll!,\ s pe <:ialist s and
:-.;t l c:o
manage m en t
lil·\dUplncn t prog rarns .
~t ; 1 rd• 1 ~. J uhn ll ant•oc k
tu.. urant'C' (.'omp:ln) .
All
111 ,1 Jorl> for sa lt'S (Only I
poSI IIUIIS
\ hn·t•h 19, Krnosha Public
~: lu.uh . Kt• nosha, \\'is ..
will
ht• on c mnpus mtcn•iewing
from I p m .-5p.m . Vaca ncies :
Elt•mt•ntary - must bc abl(' to
ll':l l'h .•rt. mus1c and t>hy .
i:n:l ~~~~~ ~~alt~~~~~~~~v~n~
WS I. t-;ng ll ~h and Soc 1nl
Sudtc~ .. ntusl han;• a major in
m1nor in one of the other
llll'III IOned a reas . A m ajor or •
minor in Englis h must be
1n c I u d e d i n 1 h e s c
quallficat ions ,socia l studu;~s-­
broad field . bi o l ogy -~ertiht'd
111 general science. Engh sh -·a
major in English and a mi nor
ur a r ea of cont·entrat•on
unmimwn of 15 c r <.'tlit sl in an
addi t iona l lan g ungc art s
areas ! journa lism . speech.
drama I
March Z:S. Frd rral ( 'h ·iJ
St·nice Entra ncr Eu m " i ll
~ICg~~·:~U~~dj~;~\~:~~~-~~~~
from 8:30a.m . to 12 noon AJI
Inte r es ted st ud e nt s plea se
s1gn up fo r the exam in t he
Ph1ccm c nt OHicc. lOG Ma in
Uui lding. a nd p ick up tht>
necessa r y a ppl1 cnt1on
book let.
Please sign up for the nbo\'C
mtervie'olo'S in room 103, Old
Main
Hansen conducts experiment ,
• gt.·m·r;~ ll ~ !lilt' pt·r \l.t·t·k '
ta lkmg on \'a r wu .. III!Ji l '" .unl
NOTHING!!
~ ••
.ll't' ,1bo :.t·t llng up a him lab
m ll;m:.('n·s basement
The four HAs. r\ Dand Tom
t.._•hr . the dJrt•c tor . bns1cally
:.('(.' KnK>gl'r and Magl'Stro's
)l'J~ IIIUII a~ a
poSIII\'C' ac '' Ac ·
l'U III pla ... hmt• n I
t·um pJ .... Jnnent c:m be- \'lewed
nwrC')~ b~ ""'t'lghmg tht•
numt)l,~ul 'lun hty or tht•
actt\lllt-:.. hl'ld th1s semcstcr
t:om p••rt-d to last semestt•r ."
t·um mt•nll'<i unt· of the HAs
Krtk'~t·r \' ll'\l.t.-d hiS poSIIIOII
a:- " l.~t·au.: ••bit• tu fa c1htate
.. tudt•nt.. :-o th at they get Uw
111. 1 .\1111 um
amo u n I 0 f
.... ta .. f.u· twn HUt u f th l'lr
Ulll\t·r .. JI~ t'\ IU'riCnt·t• as they
po:-~Jhl~ t·:m
In rl'feren('t• to
h.., 'It'"" "' tht· )Oh Krutogcr
sa 1d , " Hansen , as an up·
pcrclass ha ll . has ad\'nntages
wh1ch we are capable or
bu1lding upon . O ur con('ern
hcs in c r eating events and
havmg spea kers wh1ch npply
tu th e s tudent s w ho live ht·n·
111 ll a nscn ."
Hesldl'nce halls nrl' ~ tart
1ng to feel the nCt"£1 to sho""
!lt udents som e Spt.'(.'lfit.· ad
~~~~~':l~t~s. w~~~ ~~r~a~~~~:~!
I
hous mg due to the dl'<'rt';IM' 111
enrollm ent An ex
pcr iment wi th the ne\1.' st;1ff
pu!o iiiOil S and thc curncuitun
t·uord 1na t ors o r prog r :un
mer~ at Uanscn llall an• an
attl•mpl to mak e dornut ont•,
:1 more plca sa nt plact• to lnt·
~ t udenl
Legal hassle s
ACLU offers help
In
l l.i \ 1'
l ollt'I"I'T
llrll' pu..:-rhlt• .. uun·t• ••f hd p
lur ,, .. tud•·nt .,..,,h ll·~a l
prublt•ru, , .. rrl-!tll hcrt• un
" :O. I au~
h·~.:a t prohlcnb
do
IIOIIItTI '"'II,IIt• lht•hlrmg U( /1
1•• ~~•·1
.tncl ru'"' uf tht>m
111'\•'1 o'\!'ll l.!l'llut·nurt .. ..;ud
\\111,,,111
l' t•le
Kcllt.•).
l•JIIIIII tlllll',llturt~ dt.·p:1 r tmen t
l<• "t.'l'llll~ Kr·lil•\ ..... as l•h·cll:d
' u,· prt·-.Hi t'-nt of the
STUDENTS &FACULTY
HOW MUCH
WILL YOU TAKE?
Fac ulty at UW SP are being FI RED beca use of the
"so called " need to reduce s pending here . Stu dents and taeu1ty have not had Input In decisions
that ~fleet OUR acade mic PfOQra ma . Come to a
mHIIng Tu ts ., Fe b . 26 at 7:30 p .m . In the Wrig ht
Lounge (U.C. ) to discuss what we can a till do
How long will you all passively a nd let
mike
decis ions that effect your lift .
oth.;,
GET IN VOl YEO . THERE'S STill TillE!
\\ 1"-'onsm Valley Ch aptt•r uf
Mit' Aml'ncan Ci\'11 I.Jtwrta•·lo
l 'mun tt\ C L UI
" We hOJ>l' to prm• ~th · ·•
M'f\' ICl' for \nd1 V1duab \\tlh
h·.,:a l hassles s uc h a~ lantlh rrd
III'Hblt•rns." Kell ey :..oud " Wt·
""a nt to bridge the gap l':IIL.. t'tl
h\ the end of the Sl'f\ lt'l''
h~nne rl y provtdt'tl b) tht·
Sl udt•nt 1-, oundat iun la .... yt•r ..
Pawnbroker
sets up shop
The U n iver s ity F ilm
Suc 1et y will prese nt Th r
1•a .,.. nbroktr on Feb. 2G ;11 i
p.m . and 9: 15 p .m . in Oltl
Muin Aud itor ium .
ltod Ste iger pla ys a J e \I.'ISh
refugee who escaped from a
dea th co m p whe re his wifl'
und c hildre n perished . lie
f~ur7~"'redhoc;r:!rrs t~n e~~~~~~~
Uvlng ln the s habbiness o1 his
da ily s urroundings, he lost
faith in God a nd his CeJID'A'
ma n . His wall of bitterness
am aahes a t the end when he
r ea li ze• h is r ea p on s ibil it)'
tO"Nard huma nity .
Flash·
backl r e v ive hJs past.
-
Page 9
Speakers stress black identity
~ 0:~~\:~ryB\~;~::~~atth ar:~~=· :~x~~~~~:S~:i ~c~~s~·;::r' ~~~~~~~~~a::
t
THE POINTER
February 21, 1974
Blo ck Culture Week
lli nggold and Ramona Austin sl<"reotypn. They are l'i rile.
lut:hlightl'dtheBl:tckC\llture h(•atbt rong bruit'S who uflcn
Wce!k, Frb 2-9. sponsored by l11st after white women
the Black Sl:udent Coalition
The bl>~Ck experience has
~~~of the goals of Black bl't'n limited and narrowly
CUitun- W~k 15 to make dt'fioed m the past. s;ud
people awa r e or black Boglt> Black audicnt'es nt'f'if'
idcnllly ."'s:ud James Vance. tn st>t' a viable black man onBSC ad vi sor
mm
f~~~~i~i~ ~;:,~~7g;;~~
\'ear tu gwe black st udt'nt s 3
fep r tosentati\•e •·oicto on
l':lmpus Vam•e s:a•d Th e
coal!tton now has a brouder
co~-~~~nhopc to ex tl'fld
black
·· slac k ac1ors of tht' past
had to m~t the demands of
tho:tr age and ltmc:· Bogle
~ud nut m:any of lhto old
:..·torshado.>nergyandust'dil
this ,·· he said.
Black filmma ker s and
actor~ mst I)(' triX' to their
uwn I'ISIOfl, exper ient'C and
life. Boglt• said.
;\Is . Hinggold. an arhst
from tt arlt>m , il>ew York,
dtscussed ''Art and the Black
Woman ·· on Tuesday . She
~:~;~~ s~i:;~:~e~~r~gof t~~
\'anuus s t:agMi of her art
work .
.. ~ olher crcal•vc field ts
asdoscdtothoscwhoarenot
:~~!~~~:~r~~~:~.
~~efi~~~id ~;~~~ ~~~-!~a~fs_aru~~~~
1
~:;e::s~t~·ss a~%Y ~:t~ 11 ~: bl:::~o~:;t:· .;;: ~~I f~~ sa~~ IM'l!~·es the pufliOSt' of
her wo rk is t"·ofold . to
communtt.- Wto are al so uKlustr y "ho tlrt' able to
c11ncrrned "' llh natwnal mounta•n thtot r integ r ity
problems." Vance !l.;ud
1\nglc spokt' on " An In·
tHpreh\'l' I{J s tor~· of Blal·ks
In Amehcan F'ilms," Monday.
~\·b
~ Bugle. author of
"Toms. Coons. Mulallotos .
.\ l:unm,es . and Bucks . "
dt~usst'd the use of 1hese
stcr('(llypestnfilms
"Ttwse s ten'lltypes c•ust
prnn:mly in
llollywood
films made for the Mal
populatton.''Boglcsaid Some
films wtorr produced 111·
dependently out of Hollp••ood
for black atl(hences and dtd
nutusethestcrt'OI)-pe$
Bogle defined h1 5 five
ste rl.'n l vpes
broaden the image of women
~~~~::::!e ac~a:':~~·:~ !-~b~
~uppnrt thc.- sys tc.-m Thl.' first
hla\·krolt'SII·en•porlrJ~I.'dby
1\'r llr~lry
nr .... s
In earlie r patntings s he
triedtoshowthl'l'it>lenceand
turbulence of the 1960's, she
said. " ln1963. l begantodo
tlw more important p.'lrl of
my work I am now con·
ce rned11·ilhbt'ingawaman "
The systl:' m af p;tinting I
use ts Black Light . I use
Ulack Light in relationto lhe
wa y l s{'{'lh roughm ysl.'l f. Ms
ltinggal d said .
" I work from the blacks
a nd browns and g re ys that
co1·er my .!S kin and hair and
shadesofblues.g r('('nSand
rl.'ds thai c reate my forms
andt e:clures."
To sa)' thai art docs not
h:tl'e a gendcrlstosayl hat
a rldot'li not ha\'eaculturc .
she said .
Ml;_ ltmggold has rf'CI'nll )'
lx't.'fl iO\'Oh•td in Art Without
Walls . a rehabi l italion
program for women at !he
Women 's !louse of Dl'll'nlion
at Riker's Island .
"The most rea l thing in
lho.> world Is change The
problem comes ,.-hen people
tr)' to fight it," said Ms.
Austin, a public sc hool
teacher from Minnesota .
Ms. Austin ga ~·e dramallc
prese nt:ttl onsofMrica n a nd
Afr o·Am~an Jitc.-raturc :.s
,.·ell as some of her own
ptl('try . \\lie read works af
authors s uch ;u; Don L. Let-,
Gwendolyn Brooks, Richard
Wright . :'l \a rgaret Walker and
Ethridge Knigh t.
·' ll isamixtureoflheblack
t u\ture :.nd the " ·este r n
c ullurc thai makes aa
Americanblacksounique,"
~he ~«nd
,\ h ,\u s tin read wo rk s
d<·almg with IO\'C, friendship.
Mkt:tll'5andprotest.
Sei'Cralqueslions follo"'cd
the readtng.
Wh:H do you think of
,\m crtcan blacks laking
African nam es?
" I sec black s lak ing
Mrican names as p;trt of
~.-:.rchmg far an ide ntit y, "
s.11d ~Is . AU5tin .
Is much of the poetry you
read tonigh t your own?
" Yl>s. ill~ I have alway s
ll'rtllen.since l wasa littlc
gtrl"
Do ynu think that wh ite
people get much out of the
blackpoctryyou read:mdthe
actionsyouused'?
\
" I hope they do,"she said
" Whil e their ex per ie nces
wi ll neccssa ril y limitthcmas
to haw much thev ca n un de rstand, l trytoselectwarks
whtch can also be a p ·
prt'Ciatt'dfor tht'i r literar y
••alue.·
:'lis. Aus tin Is associated
w1th Lordll.'y and Dame of
Boston and to urs college
l'am pu ses givi ng her
dramaltc pre~nta tions .
WASHINGTON'S
BIRTHDAY
11h1tes m black-fact The
Tnm figurl'W3Sportr:tyl.'dby
~uch people as Bdl Boj.1nglt'S
ltobu\Son. Sidne)' Po1 t1er and
j{oscl)(' {.('(' Bro,.-n
('noosconJ url'uptht'tmage
uflhl'darkey andarl• not
t a kt·n se rt ousl)' Ste pptn
Ft•lchtl. ~·anna I " Ou r
~:~~~-~>5:~.~~ ~~~;;:~~ ~;.~
SALE
t)'pt
~l ulan oes :tre pnmanly
tr a gt c char:aclc.-U . moslly
.,..nmc.-n They art' ~·ery close
tu,.htll.'tn3ppcaranct'-dark
bl:tt•k woml.'n ll't'fl.' con ·
~ldl•rl.'d to be dc.'!ie.\l.'d and
1.111a1trachve
Mammte . or Aunt
hmtmas. arere-pr('S('ntedby
such actresses as Loutse
Jk'a~·en; , Ethel Watc.-r s and
Pea rl Batley
and to s h o"· " ' amen 's
unin•rsaltty b)' patnting a
work which erosses tbe ltnes
ofage.raceandclass.ac·
co r ding to :tn nrticlc.- in
•
"
~
Block art created by by Faith Ringgold
was on display during block culture
week in the Fine Arts Center
ERZINGER'S
ALLEY KAT~
SAVE 50% AND MORE ON
SLACKS
WOOL BLENDS SI ZE S 3· 17
Ballet tiptoes into Po int
DRESSES
choreog r ap hed by Petipa
ga on sale .
The origi nall y schl.'duled wit h mu.~ic by Minkus and the
" lm
tw o and one- h a lf da y c ont empo rar y
residency by theballelt roupe p r essions" by Sander s
'' Sapoli '' by
had to be altt-red when funds Sch ull er .
Bournonville·llels
tcd
·
Paulli
from a Sational Endowment
of lhe Ar ts Grant dld not and "Crazy Qu i lt "
come thr ough . but the choreographed by Richard
En~~:
lu
nd
with
mu
sic
by
companyh.asbeen coocracted
togtveasmgle perform ance. A.1 ron Copl;md a!J;(I Will be
perfo rmed
~rdm:~/u~u:o~h!:: !'::~i Th e repertory group's The troupe of 19 YOWII
mterestcd m attending may program for the . evem ng dancers formcdlessth.antwo
comto to the Uru\'CT'!IIty Arts rangn from tradittonal to yea" ago unde r the 'Nina or
and Lt-<:turt'S Boll Office chr contempou ry 11lt' company the American Ballet The~tre
is kflown for "imaginative
1
The
Ball et Reperlory
Comp<~ny of Se"' York , unde r
the a rti s tic di r ecli on of
tllchard Englund , ,.;n per·
form lit UWSP on Thursday .
reb. zt . at a p m tn the
Wa rr en G a rd Jenkins
Theatre of the ~·inc Arts
Center .
Tickets<~lready have been
~~:~ ~~~:d~:~tk:~ ;J,·i~h ~1 u:;~f~~~~~!~~~~ .'::~e~
tt.a••enotyet beenpaid for wll l deux 111
Don Qu t:co te.
=~r~:~~n~~.-~·ell
execu ted
ASS' T. STYLES , COLORS. PATIERNS
LONG & SHORT
SIZES7- 15
SKI JACKETS
ASS ' T, COlORS, STYl ES
SWEATERS
VES TS. CARDIGANS'. PUl lOVERS
StZESS, M, l
NO REFUNDS OR EXCHANGES
LIEI-EliEIICIICIICII!i13mi!WC.C.. .
February 21, 1974
THE POINTER
· 'Page 10
,,.
.. ·~
uNi.vE!tSITY .F 1 ~ .sociETY· 1:oo 1& 9).~ p.m.:
Audttor•~· ~m Built!irig. ·~nbi-j,ker.'A
,
CIIRISTIAN SCIENCE COLLEGE ORGANIZA~ION: 6:15 POINTER RIFLE AND P1STO.LWijg /4EETI!Wi: 7,00
p.m., UCM Center. "We should master lear tnstead or • p.m .•. Roor;rt. '1!.11 Student .Servtces Buildjng. A general
cultivatingit :" Allarewarmlyinvitedtoattendourweekly ~-;e_ung Will be held to dtscuss future planning and activttit:S.
;
testimony m~ting "
ATTENTION VETERANS: KNOW ' YOUR BENEFITS: t'ACULTY i:AY.OFF MEETING: Meetingito discuss what
8 :00 p.m ., American Legion Hall , 1009 Clark. Jerry can be done tn regard to faculty lay-offs. 7 ~ p.m., Wright
Schubert, Regional Representative, will speak o~ ,all Lounge,U.C.
I'
.
Federal benefits available. Questions and answer sesston to
·r:
follow, all vet~s welcome.
.
ne ay,
ruary
1974
ThurSday February 21, 1974
.
w·ed sd
WE SELL STEREO STUFF
AT
MtERICAN BALLET REPERToRY .COMPANY: 8:00
p.m. Jenkins Theatre, Fine Arts Building. Sponsored by
Aris and Lectures Series.
INTER VARSITY CIIRISTIAN FELLOWSIIIP MEETINC? :
- 8:oo p.ril.;-Nicoiet Marque! e
UniverstiY Cente r:
.
. ..
.
Friday , February 22. 1974 •
Science Fiction Film : 7:00 & 9:15p.m., Auditonum , Matn
Building. " Between Time and Timbuktu." ·
UABCOFFEEHOUSE,Roger, WendyandSam,9p.m. to 12
p.m ., Program Banquet Room, University Cen~r .
'--TWEs:r&REO-SHQPw DIVISION ST., STEVENS POINT
oom,
KlUCK STOP
°
LARGE ·POINT 25e
SHOTS 30e
a:':J:I.
~~~~UN~TED ~URCII OF CIIRIST:
•xED DRINKS ONLY 35e
1748 Dixon St. ,
Sunday servtce 10.00 a .m.
. · .
·
FRAME PRESBYTERIAN . CIIURCII: _1300 Mam St.,
Services (~undayl 9:15 & 10 :45 a.m.
ST. PAUL'S UNITED METHODISTCIIURCII : 600 Wilshire
Blvd. Sunday Service 10:00 a .m.
ASSEMBLY OF GOD : 3017 Oturch Street, Sunday services
at10 :45 a .m. , & 7:45p.m. Bus transportation provided . Call
341-4640.
SUZUKI SOLO REeiTAL: 3:00p.m., Michelsen Hall , Fine
Arts Building.
PLANETARIUM SERIES: 3:00 p.m. Science Building.
"The Best·Way to Travel ," Narrated by Dennis Kolinski .
STUDENT SAXOPHONE RECITAL: 8:00p.m., Michelsen
Hall, Fine Arts Building. Sharon Wienandt.
and 10e Off TOP SHELF.
STEVENS POINT
HATCHET DAYS ·sALE
All SALE SHOES I BOOTS
522 A PAIR
2 PAIR 8~ 2
.a.·· PAIR 1022
.
~·
~~~t-~neter~vi= :!'ste=~
materiala. Completed applicatiollliM«'m
must be turned in to the Counselin~ler.
on or before Thursday, March 7.
.
U.C.M. PRE-MARRIAGE SE~JINAR :
February 26,
8:01H:30 p.m ., Peace Campus Center. Ther are still a few
openings for the Tuesday evening course at begins on
February 26. U interested call 34&#18 to pr egister. 'nle
February 23 and Match 16 dates are filled. e are taking
pre-registration for the April 20 seminar.
•
.
"TilE GLOBAL VILLAGE" SEMINAR: 7
February .25, 26, 'ZT, & 28th . Introducing
simulation games, geared toward understa
·world. Schedule as follows :
·
!JAB JAM .SESSION, New Coffeellow!e, 3 p.m.
Monday, February 25, Peace Campus Cen · 7:0tHO:OO
p.m ., "The Dot Game" <To reflect our
eplion of the
world> .
·
•·
Mondqy, F~pruary .~5, 1974
Tuesday, February 26, Mitchell Room. Univ ity <:enter •
EXPLORATIONS IN.CIIRISTJAN TEACIIING : 7:30-9 :30. 7:00-10 :00 p.m ., "Spaceship Survival Gam lA game of
p.m . Peace Campus Center - Coffeehouse, Maria Drive a.· stereotypes and prejudices l.
Vinc.e nt St: Informal discussion . No obligations, no cost-. Wednesday, Februarj 'ZT, Mitchel!.
Sesstoos wtll last about 2 hours in Coffeehouse with some Center • 7:00-10:00 p.m., "Starpower ·I
light refreshments . .
richer and the poor get poorer. l.
Thursday , Feb . 28; Peace Campus Center · 7 10:00 p.m .,
"The Global ViUt&e" <Where the dyna cs or world
Tuesday, February
1974
relationships become explosive L
.
UNIVERSITY PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE: 8:00 p.m. If you are interested·in attending all lournogh
Michelsen Hall, Fine Aris Building.
please call the UCM o[fice and '!lake l
"There will be a maidmwn of30parhcipantst
Dr. D~v~ R. ~roae, who has studied the Kennedy
~at_1on. Will discuss possible conspiracy behind the GREECE AND ACAPULCO TRIPS, .
sign up in the PJ:olramming Office. Un~>
assassmation, on lllslgbt, 7:30 p.m. on WWSP-FM.
call 346-2412.
·
26,
,.,
-~--
1111 I l l I I
llTlan Oiapel,
es during the
day.
:-·Michelsen ·..
.'
p.m: ... Peace
1 Sl,. <behind
with a Service
lso take place
UWSP News .
BEER IS 10e 115e
BOffiE BEER IS 20e I aoe
.
(.'O~t~tUNAL PENANCE : 7:00 p.m.. N
liasement of St. Stan's. Distribution or
Communal Penapce Service on Ash .Wedn
UNLVERSI'I:Y••CONCERT- BANDS: 8:00·
Hall, .Fine Arts Building.
l\IJDWEEK LENTEN .SERVICES: 8:
Campus Cente~ - Maria Drive & Vince
Tempo) . Mi<!week Lenten Services will begi
of Repentance. Distribution of Ashes will
during this Eu~haristlc Se~ice . ·
FIRST BAPTIST CIIURCH (American) : 1948 Oturch St.,
Joe.
.
...
Sunday· services at 10:45 a .m. and 7:15p.m.
·
CIIURCII OF ntE INTERCESSION tEpisc:opall: 1417
OturchSt., Sunday masses at 9:00a.m . &5 :15p.m.
LUntERAN STUDENT COMMUNITY : Peace Campus
Center, Maria Drive and Vincent St. , Service with IIISTORY ASsiSTANTSIJIP oF•'ERED:
Di · h cha'
f th
Eucharist , Saturdays 6:00 p.m . & Sundays 10:30 a.m .
NEWMAN UNIVERSITY PARISH <Catballcl : Newman
etnc •
tnnan
e Graduate Co ittee of the
Otapel - basement of St. Stan 's . · Coister Chapel - 1300 History Department; has announced that Hi ory majors·or
&
minors who wish to be considered Cor a 197 1975 graduate
da
4
00
Maria Drive. Weekend Masses : Satur ys, :
G:OO assistantship in History should submit
applications
p.m., Newman Chapel. Sundays, 10:00 a.m., 'Newman and credentials to the Department of Hislory 424 COPS> by
Otapel , 11:00 a .m., Cloister Otapel , 6:00 p.m., Cloister March 1, 1974 •
·
<llapel . Weekday Masses : Monday-through Friday, l1 : 45 LAW SCIIOOL ADMISSION TEST: The
4
45
a .m ., Newman Chapel. Tuesday through Friday • : p.m ., mission Test will be given at UWSP on 5'!1
Newman
Confessions: W~days , 4: 00 p.m ., there are at least fif~ candjdates inter
~very Wed. night- 8·11
ON THE SQUARE -
I
27,
UNIVERSITY SINGERS: 8:00 p.m. ~tich
Arts Building. ··
.,., ·
~AB f.ILM: 8 :00p.m . Wisc;onsin Room. Un ersity Q;nter.
Sunday, February .24, 1974.
· Featuring prices from""ttie 50's
TAP
b
re.
SCIENCE FICTION CLUB PRESENTS:
BETWEEN TIME ·& TIMBUKTU
Written by Kurt Vonnegut, Jr. thl• mowle comblnH the comedy end the
. Mllre of hi• bnt worb Including:
-ll SlAUTERHOUSE FIVE
-ll CAT'S CRADLE .
-ll GOD BLESS YOU ·
-ll
MR. ROSEWATER .
-~:· SIRENS OF TITAN
Thursday & Fridav·~ Feb. 21 ,& 22
·
ADMISSION _$1.00
OLI5' MAIN AUDITORIUM
2 SHOWS EACH NIGHT! 7:00
15 P.M. .
r. e:
.
,
, •
.,_
ENTERT
TU SDAY Tl
THIS·'
•.
-,~_,
AT
February
21
1974
1HE POINTER
Poge I
Rod Steiger
II:.IY; 7110 ,i-
~IS
~~~~~=~· .
':
IN
p.m .,
"THE PAWNBROKER"
7 ;00
m.·tt'b &ulding ,\ gmeral
:USii
fullll'!'planmng and ac·
IXG : li~IIIIO (ticUU ,.·h.at
~I)' Ia} -olfs 1~30 p m • Wnght
A grim portrait ol 1 m1n who 1urviwed the httll ol I
eoneent11tlon c:1mp to encounler lur1her prejudlc:e
ln1 p1wnshop In N.Y.'1 Htrlem.
uory 27, 1974
·oo pm. :x. . . m~n Ol:lpel,
Feb . 26
ribullonoCa.<l!ndW'lngthe
7 & 9:15p .m .
OlD MAIN AUDITORIUM
~~~:~~ lhchelsen
~;~.~ ··i\·l~~~~ p~II ~ :~~
SPECIAL STUDENT RATE
for INCOME TAX 'RETURNS
$5.00 & UP
\'icl'S"lllbtg1 "'lhllScn ·i«
) f tl.sht>S .,. il\ butn k(" plo.ce
IC("
...
OOpm
~lim
.sm H.oum l'n
$ol"ll lb11. f'ine
\'1"111~
Ct'nter.
INTEGRITY TAX SERVICE
900A Moin St.
:So Appol.ntmfonl ...,. _ , . C._.l St1o1~
0. -n.e Square!
I
News
classified
·ads
Home Ec
Wanted Organmstructorfor
11·20 sludtnts lnst!"Utttons
held al oo..-nlown lo.:allon
J.I L-166i
Attention' paper Klenc"e Books gathertng dustm your
m:.)<WS . Pick up schollts tnp closet~ Put them to ,.,..k for
appltnltons and 1ummer )'OU T'r.ldt for boots and
t•m ploy ment applicallons n magazult'S.
soon a1 pou!b le in D-127 ot Til E BOOK EXCJ IANGE
tht Scienee Building.
ZIH lh Stret>l
Wausau
~:r":.t ~~~~it~K'<il .
designs
new
tables
8-tra~k
st'C'
.s;.,.• monry on
rn1• tint Oteck t~ out · ta~!
sta ndmg features .
WI 11-(ra~k lap•~ 1apH thr
lownt prices
20-6$ per "~Y you "ant , ¥1ilh thr songs
c ent o (f storr pnces
) Ou,.anl. Slng l~ a lhum tapti
· eornpany set pri~es .no jhl S%.!iO . Doub lr ln J th
pl'rliOnalmark-up
ta~justSI . Gc-toldtapu
·al1majorbrands, fullhneof rruprd. 1 .7$ and S L.t!i .
pruduc~ Akai , AR, M:arant z. Hrokrn tapn
rrpair~ .. ,\Jt
Suny, Garrard . Fisher . et~ . ,.ork donr ,.llh a hfl'Umr
reee n · t'rl , amps , TV '1. ~tnr.:ant"' .
tumtabiH.a utodecks
C atl&bat l-II · IOl,. lf ltOI.In ,
..10 pressuringsalesmen
plra!il'ln•rmru.agr.
-t:tclldave doubl rguanntee
-fast . fast deh\'eT)' . s- t4days
('heck~~~ lht' featuresb!-fore ltoom for Kt-nt·.()pen March
)OU bu y Don 't b!- fooled by 151. all mcluSt\' t', prefer
lllhl'r dlsrount dt'alers Ct\'t' femalr:! blocks from ~ampus
mt'acallorcomt'O\'er Jerr y on Q;uk St Call Tim at J.tl ·
2302 . t!ltO Knuuen
J t JJ for further mfo
MEN : -W0)1E."' :
Summer t:mplormen~ Ap·
JOHS ON SUIPS : No U · pltca ta on~<~;rtA•· atlablem tht"
perien« required. l::xcellent Siudent Sen·ac("S Ce nt("r ,
~~~iec~o!~~,..~~~ j~~\'e~~ ;.::a ~ ~~ t~~::ho~c~;111a':career. Send $J for
td b) UAB,
in · nl•cant s
~~~;:·~- ~f'~;, 111362.
~j r~;:::;;:~~~~=-~:::=~
..,,... Ju A ,.._., &
) Cen ter , or An&eles, Wnh ington
a.r.f,...lnJIIttt
ENTERTAINMENT
TU SDAY THRU SUNDAY
THIS WEEK-
•
..... o.........
, .,. Me•' • .. LMlW.'
1SWEATERS
AT THE
EC 0 NIGHTCLUB
... -.u •flllrl.l t . 11l'tllll..-r
PIIOI'DBIONA.lLT
c:u:.untu • ......._.., ,
••• ••••• • ••••• COUP'OH ............ . :
:
!
~
Ne :
tt
CHILl
0.. HM,..
~..:.:==-"-~~
STEVENS POINT
ROTARY CLUB
:
-~ 88c - · •
w'::'C..,..
Of~~b~th~_,~21
~; ·~=·;~ ·· · ·;;:.::·;:;.;····~;~;;
SUPPER
SUN. FEB. 24
~f' . M . lo!lf'.M .
YMCA
All You Can Eat $1
Page
.!.3_
Organic farming 1s basis for lifestyle
h~ ,\IIM>rt~l ;uwk
Th•s
1s
the "<"Cond
10
•
a
scnes of a rtici(>S on alternate
lifestyles The "subje<:l! " of
the a rtacle are organic farm ·
ers They are simple folk
and don' t want thc1r names
or piclltrcs pubhshcd
;1re also bc;autifu l
They
These human beings aren 't
tr ymg to htde anythmg by
rt>mmmng anonymous
They
JUSt don't want to become
spcctacles
The r ea l story bchmd any
st udy of alter nate livmg as the
people I hope you ca n get
that stor y fr om the thmgs
th<J t surround these people
a nd my a ll ernpts to dt"Se r ibe
them
Somewher e near here
\
there's a farm that provides
nounshmcnt and sanctuary
for e1ght nov tce fa r me r s .
These e•ght people are all
relatively young They wea r
blul•Jt:.ans
They ha\'C long
h:ur
They look a lot like
people you see on the squa re .
These e•ght people live
communally
That means
they hve toget her as a
<:ommwu ty
Each of the
e•ght memtX'r s IS umqut
The one th1ng tht-y share IS
th(' concept tha t relating to
nature IS the firs t v1tal step
toward hvmg a n honest life .
~lann eapo la S ·· S t
~hl wauk ec
LOUI S· ·
These a rc na mes
of c1 ties wht• re some of the
members of the commumtv
unce li ved
•
The far m ha!o been home
fo r about four to e1ght people
fo r th ree "'mtcrs now People
c;ome and leave when they
choose They stay and lea\·e
'4hen they need to When you
look at t h ~ a tm os pher~ th 1s
place has to offer , you wonder
.... hy anyone would want to
leave
•
Pl ant$ produce foodst uffs even in the dead of wi nter .
.
Lifestyle continued
It'sCurrter and J n~C1)me
\1) hfe m an era of Macl)lln:a\d".-: Golden Arches
wall !Jr.uchangt'd for dolla r
btlls
1lw nuu..s.t- ls alh•e "'"lth
...-:umthof ...--oodstoH!I. cats
and old dogs The kltt'ht'rl sort
"'homcn•r chos.H to work
ufhugsyou~~o·i ththe smell sol
urgaml' l1vmg What used to
Ill' thr front pof'Ch is now a
~no;.·nhow;c Tlk• lloust' IS 3
Febouory 2 1, 1974
TH E POINTER
-~
forttushfe Onf.oftht'gl rls
s:udtht> -..vrds ·· gwtng and
~longv.•lhnature .'' l new.'r
Tht' ... ork
IS done
by
Alle•ghtpeoplcdon'twakl'up
at the crack of dawn to uulk
\he goaL~ f:l't'I")' Oill' JUS! 501'"1
of don ~~ohat he '5 best ;u
Thcre•snobossonthisfaml
lwardthO><>•••ordsiWWld50
gwdtQj.!e\ht>rbt-IOre
TheM' smaplt• people didn 't
talkmuchbuttheyh.::ada lot
tusa)
Sumctmwanthcntoete-enth
Co.'lllut) , llht'nthtSWIISjUSI
an anfanl of a country
Se!thft•onthefarmaSII1as stugghngto~omeantn­
ducks and oth~
la•·mgttung,;st:J)' mthl'aro...,·n gruo•·y :lJ I.U\1!' o\mll'rinn '-dusltta.l gaallt , i1 group Of
hUll' hwK'll IIU'rounding the Si)lr . ltasn 't as rustt ca5 TIM' Apadll' Indians ...,TOte 1toha.t
m:.anhou.se ~rto 's~·motM" \\:&h un~ ~cart' four male the} called TIM' Slor) of
httlc hOUS(' reservf'd for the human bf-angs and four t'rll'a ti un . The t:nglish
n•a.ding of the Srars and fcmalc human IM-mgs Tht•y translauon looks like ttus :
:art' patrt"!i-off but nont' of
IWebuck c::atalog
thl'm lt~l a cont ra ct 11
IW('t'SS:Jty for a ml'amngful
MO!it of the food on the farm rda!il)flshtp.
Soll'ltherebehapplness.
asprlldun"'i therc _ TI!eyha•·c
1\'e .. holi\'t tn this enlnt•\ctaskt'<l...,her e the carnprnenlhl.'rearepoor .
.agarden...,·hu.•htsabout 100
ya rd s long and about 100 moncycamt•fromtobu)' thu;
w,• st m ·etolil'e bythesoil
larmandM•tuuthasparadosc andlhelaborofour liands.
,ard~-..· idc Thnt 's twoacres
in farmer talk The g11rdcn l didn'tthinkit...,alianyof
So be on your way and do
producH mon !han enough Ill} busnM.•s,;
ool hann us
Tht• taxn
The) get patd
So ll.'t there be happiness.
food to fft'd eaght people. The
thmg~ !hat ha••e to De store- ..1thsa\'Ong.s
bought arto paid for ...,,th
GcUmt: back to nature
honll'
(;oat, .
anunt•yca.r~fromtMsalto
oofpot!Cf)' and dotng odd JObs
Supp o Hdl~
that
"
a
wo•·tn acrn of
landuuttherethat11bt' •••hcat
no:xt fall Part of that wheat
r\bo.lut fiftet'fl mllhon buffalo
mo•·emt•nt m contemporary later. a peaceful. serene·
socwt~
Tht·~ :~re
TIM.- pei)ple on tht$
farm art trul) "gellang back
tu na.turt ··
That 's the
al!t>rn;~tal·t lhc)· hal' tchoscn
luuklngwhucmanlandedme
a Cup) of Thll' SCwy of
t'rNtiun and sa ad . " tll'l't' is
ourstate mcnltotheprcss."
Pottery Is so.ld at an arll and c rafts stor e in Wild Rose.
This is one means or getting money to buy ar1ieiH that
canoot be prod~JCed on the farm .
Thcentrgyl>hortageliaJ noef(ect on the
...,'O(l(ieookstove Notonlydot'lttrookthe
foodbullth-eat5thelutchenti"''t'll
Poqe 14
THE POINTER \
February 21 , 1974
No seasons, no Iim its
placed on snowshoes
by !.loyd ~~IJon
For the m01t part , the guns
tha t roared at the flush or a
grOUSt" or the whutle ol duck
"'101(.5 hn e ~ sil~ and
ha\e takm the•r plaC'e on the
11un rac k It Hems tha t most of
w .... ho tramped the .... oocb and
\ ~A am ps url i~U th•s season 1n
~~a rch or game ha,·e all but
turnt'd to other endeavors It IS
a ume of wa1t.ng for ne-....·
-.e.:lliOns
But hold on Thts as no1 the
11mt" to 01! that shotgun a nd
allo~A 1110 rema m 1dle You see.
t ~ re 1s a fur ry ~A hile creatu~
r~m1ng parts of thu country
that h:as bt-en lorgouen by most
!{unners
The snow·shoe hare IS fair
~o:am e . knows no closed season .
.md ) CI . all of those folks ..... ho
couldn 't wa 1t for hunt•ng·
~uons to ope-n now let thar
\ hotgum collect dust Vt':r)' fe-w
pcoople acm·ely hunt them
\lore com mon ly kl\0\lo'n as the
,no.... ·shck rabbtt . lhe:se big
h>~ r e-5 off~ an opponunaty for
, orne good hunti ng Why so few
peoplt•
hun t
them
15
heWIIde r lni!l Pe rh aps II II
bfoca ~ the "'hate hare:s an"
dS.SOCia ted "' llh northern an"u
of the sta te
Portage County harbors 115
fa1 r share of sno....· ~hoe hares
omd 11 1s no tr 1ck at all for
S!evens Po1nt re-sutent.s to Ond a
place to bunt them I am not fool
enough to gt ve away any secret
hunung spot.\ bul l am willing to
" " 'e to noug.b direction to allow a
prospt'C'II\·e hunter find his own
..,
'O Of"thwn t of
St~ens
Point tS
~;·,·~~ s~:~~ ~~;~=.no~~
k no~An
as the [)ev.-ey Mush and
a glance a t a &ood area map w1ll
8 "~
tts exact location.
,, a l(ood name for t.he
placto because w1th1n this tract
ot la nd ca n be found spruce and
) OU
~I ars h
Sports Quiz
Ana no.... tor our s.«ond
rnultiple cho•ce sport quu
Que5tioo no 1 . ~ .\~It: Til t :
H H.I .IIWINii 1'1,,\ \'t:lt Tll t\ T
l l t ri NOT .. l o~\\' U,\ SK t:T IIt\1.1.
FO
It: IM% 0 1110 STATE
ttl'(' ' , ' t;.' i
ctdar bogs, which happen 10 be
lik~ly areas lo find !!now-shoe
hares. The rt'd pin~ plantings
o,·er thai ,...•ay alto hold a
num~r of hares
Probably th~ bes l known
melhocb of punu•ng snow-shoe
1
ha.ra 15 to Wx.ate a good-look.ln&
block OfC'O\' t'l'" and cut loose ""lth
50me good rabbit doss Snow·
shoe hares have the hab1t of
runnmg w1de ci rcles when
, Qul'5t ion no 2
WII ICII
chased by dogs
Pl. 1\VER SCORED T il E
Aller 1um•na th~ dogs Joost.
WINN ING TOUCH DOWN 1."4
t h~ hunter then pos11ions
ntt: 1"-8 NAT IONAL t~OOT·
h1mself nt a hkely look•ng
HALL LEAGUE C II AM ·
CTOSSI!\8 a nd WillS for the
P IOSSIIIP GA~I E~
qtsl to bring the hare w1thin
shoottng dulance With a d«ent
a D1ckie Post
rabbit dol or two a person can
b Curt11 PetTy
~xperience some fast and ex·
c J immy Orr
d Alan t\meche
cttmg shootlnR .
Nol everyone has accHS to
c Frank Gifford
quaHfitd rabbit dogs but thatls
~I ron no
3 • WIIICII
a m inor problem cl method
nottsl:: wns Tnt: 1tss
em ployed by dH:r hunten c.an
Kt:~T~r ll \'
OEHR\'~
be ,.m effective .... htn used to
hunt snow-shoes If you prefer
a Nashua
group hunt1ng . you can drh·e an
b Tngger
area and post shoote:rs at the
c s.... aps
d Subiscult
1111 end of the drl\'e By alter·
natmg slanders and dnvers
t: Cltntion
everyone can enjoy the ac tion.
QuKtlon no. -1 • \\'110 W,\S
for those .....ho prefer solitude
Tilt: SEATTU:
.. !LOTS '
and exerdse. )' OU can try to
I' IT(' ItiS Ct (' OACit Wllt:N JIM
.... alk up the hares It would be
IHil' TO~
WAS
ST II. I.
some .... hat less than honut to
I
'
I..A
l'
l
;o.;"G
~
da1m that a hunter ....·ould end
a D1ck Baney
hiS da y Wtth a Ulltng
b Sal Maglie
gamebag. Usually the number
c Wn Slock
of miles walked far exeffds the
if Johnny Sain
numbft's of rabbits In !he bag.
(' Jack Urlckhouse
It Is best to try this method
earl y in the momln& after a
Qut>Stion no S • NA:"IIt; TilE
fresh snow-fall 1be big ha res
I'RO t ' OOT tt AL L PLA'II' t: n
are basically nocturnal and
\\ llll t• t: U . ON A T EN ·
evtden« of tMir movement is
.. LA it UILL IS TilE E~D
IXH
freshest m the a m
lUSt: ,\t' Tt: Jt A TO\J C II ·
When memories of last fall 's
OOWN.
hunting trlpt start nawmg . at
your innards and you find
yourself ,....,lh an .acute case of
a . Marv flem lna
. , 1arv llubbard
cabin fever, why nol dust orr the
c Marvin Upshaw
s hotgun and head fo r the
Oe,...·ey. If you are not cartful
d . Marvin IJames
e Marv 'Throneberry
you just m•ght flljoy yourself.
Quest ion no 6 IN t~ . A
1\ ,\ S Kt: THAI. I.
I' I. AYEH
snmt: O Ill I ' UI~~ IN li N•;
liA:"IIt: FUlt IIIII ft lt ,\ NUt:
n H.J.F: ca: IN 111110 . Ill S
~ .\~It: Wt\ S :
a Wa lt " S o-n«k" W1lhams
b Johnny " 11~ " Kerr
c Elgm Baylor
d Cl3ren« " IJ.r.\·o" t' rancls
t'
Ed " E.asy Ed" ~tcC a uley
Quest1on no. 7
\\lltltl
tt.\SE II•\1.1. ~1 ,\ N t\ltt:lt WAS
KNtl\\' ~
M~
" I. ITT I. t:
, ,\I 'Ut-t: O!Iro''!
3
b
c
d
"
John McGraw
J oe Schulu
~la yo Smnh
Connte ~tack
f-' rtd llant)
Questton no a
T il t:
OF Tilt-: AU.-T IMt: G tlt: ATS
I ~ l'tli.U.
a Tommy Mason
b Tommy llitchcock
c Tommy Aaron
t1 Tommy Sm ith
t' Tom my J odarski
Question no. II · \\'11.\T \\',\ S
Tllf:
F lltS T
I'M\S I ~It
\\110
W,\ S
t"UOTIIALI.
1-' llt ST C'IJM·
M I !'S I O~t:lt ~
(I AI 03VIS
b George Balas
c J oe f'oss
d f-' ord ~o·nck
t' Wally P1pp
QuKtlm no 9 · WIIO DID
T ilt: \IIL\\'AUKt:t; HHAVt: S
(ot:T t' OH JOI:: t\O COC K
\ \ llt:N li t: \\',\ S T lt,\llt:O TO
Cl.t:\'t: L,\ NU IN 1M2'!
t ' ORWA IW
IS
CO~ IUI NAT I ON
1-'IIOTISALL
A~l t: IU C ,\ ,~
t.t:,\IHit:'S
a Hob Feller
b llocky Colavito and cash
F'ellx Mantilla and Billy
Bruton
d Don nlllard and a player to
tK' named later
e Bob llatel and llube:rt GIM
Que5t1on no 10 · NAM f: OS I::
c
III STO H\' ~
a Ste,·e Tens\ to f'rrd Bilet·
nlcof!
b Gus Dorais to Knute Rockne
c Urad Hoblnson to J ack
Schneider
d . Scott Hun ter to Wa ll y
ll ilgenburg
e Cllrt Irving to Wa rren \\'t":IIJ
Qutslion no 12 · WIIO MAOt:
T ilt-: I~O~fit:ST S IIOT IN T il t:
II ISTOR l ' m-· Til E NATIOSAI.
H,\SKt:T H,\ 1. 1. ,\ SSOC IATI ·
0~~
a Bill Sharman
b Bob Cousey
c. Bob Petitt
d f loyd Wicker
Stump the
Sports Stars
by JOC' Hurler. lhndy Wlntl
and Tim Sullivan
Obviously l"ve r yon(' fr om
Chtt-ch and Chong to Digger
Phelps has basketball on lht
brain these days be-ca~ we've
~~ee;;·ic:nsa g~~a~mbe~~~
Naismith's game The roUow•ng
queries a re some or the m01t
mt~est i n& ones
Q I know UCLA hold! the all timr college winning streak but
what 11bout high Khoo l ~ Hobert
Plant t Wi.scons1n Hapids l
A Our mon~y .....ould have to
ride .....1th PassaiC t N J 1 Hig.h's
" Wonder Team " wh1th reelt'd
off IS9 stratght wins bet~Aetn
1919 and 1'125
~ Is Btll Wallon beller than
Kareem Abdui -Jahbar" Dan
Ohlrrt t Poinll
A No
But . on the other
hand , he 11 belltr than Lew
Al~::1ndor
Q Is 11 true that lhe NBA
on« draUed a ~A oman " Ray
Aim t PIO\'er t
A Absolu lely. In 1969 the San
Francisco Warriors selected S.
II Iowa hig.h school phenom
Denise Long on lhe 13UI round.
IAague cur Waller Kennedy
quickly ,·oided the pld1 but
Denise ....·ound up playing in
prel iminary games prior to the
Warriors· home contests
Q DidShebonan once have a
team in the NDA'! Dave Kopperud t Merrill I
A In the 1949-5(1 season. the
renowned Sheboyaan Redsklns
compiled a siuling Z2~ record
yet somehow managed to make
the playo()ffJ ....·here thay were
ousted by the even more
renownrd Andenon Packers.
After that season both teams
lliere ousted by the NBA!
Q Was the firs t Ali·F'razler
figh t the l(rtalest In spor~
history "
John
Rlbock
tColumbus t
A We'd have to rank it just
beh1nd the 1971 ~l arquette ·
South Carolina brawl
Babl itch possible
majority leader
Slate Sen Wtlltam Bablitch
of Steven." P mnt ts "a m ong
the names most o rte n men ·
ttoned for a Democratic
ma Jority leader" if the
c.lcmocrnts tnke control of the
senate In the fn ll election ,
according to the Ca pll :a l
·nmes of Mndtson.
Some democrata woul\1 like
to dump Sen . foTcd Risser of
~1adison . now their minority
leader, the newspaper says .
11te article quotes Sen . Curl
Thompson <D ·Sloughlon ) as
t.':1lling Unblitch , " the most
likely m :m in the State Sena te
:~e~fu~:. ~
U. S.
Senator In O
But . Thompson questions
.. , DIVI SION ST ., STEVENS POINT
CAMPUS CINEMA
~-:'.!.!~~ ~~',.. • •.,~
CID
Bablitch ' 1 selec t ion u
majority leader of the Sta te
Senate on the grounds that he
tsa freshman member. "You
don' t become grand dragon
the week after you join the
lodge, " .. ld Thompson.
February 21, 1974
--
-
----
THE POir\.TER
Radio Free Rabbit is on the air
b,•
Slo•H I.~ bt•o' k
It ~uU~"C:I rabb1t .,.-eanng
,, pmk ~·ol lar huppm~t :1round
tht· oorth otnd of thc UWSP
nmpu... pleaSC'allov.· ittogo
,,,.,.-a) ill'iapartolaradlo
lt•lt•melr) sh.. ) bt-1ng ronductL-d b> the! College of
;o.;atural Bt·llo0Url'C5 tCN U I
llwaciJ\'IItesofllcott ontall
r:1bb1hli an• presently bcmg
uwm turi'O.lwlththehel p of
"'H\Ia ture
low-frequency
r:•d•otranlol mltters .
Tht• study 1s bema conduct.-dunthe-&Oacrt"Snorth
ulcounpu.<ialltcs-er••eStand
ManaS! TI't'areahasahigh
rabtut population '"'ilh som!"
del'r . grouse. hawks and
otherammals lt 5ervesasan
outdoor clas5room for some
Cl' n c la s.st"S T h11 area is
adpct•nltothelocatioooftlle
poli.Sib le extension o f
) lich•gan A•·e
The rabbit sludy is ht'adt>d
b~ John Tot•pfcr. a wild life
~,:r;.d ·ShXIl'nt,.·hoconducteda
two yea r . rad10 s tudy on
pramc ch1ckens T oe p fer
~odthattht•p ur po:sc!ofthc
,.cud) IS tog ..·e- stude-nts
,•:oo;pt'tlt'ncc '"' lth ra dio
t.-lt'111l'tl')' ht're on t'ampus.
.ond to ga1n mort' mformat1on
1.111 nbblts A rad10 lllud)' can
ho.-lp gamm format•onon the
L.,labhshmentofra ngt'S.food
am.t t·m·cr utilitOO b)' !he
anunal. pernlds of ach•·•t.v.
IIIUttllhl) and dl'll ~lh'l .
,\ reo..'t'l\'l't must be at ·
tal'IK-d tu ont• uf thrre an·
Lellll:l<''lfltht•northendul
t·ampu.. bcfOf't' mon11onng
ao.-11\"lht., of the rabb1ts By a
IITU C t' " '
calltd
tnan~,:_ularJLallon . any rabb1t
.. ,.. rnn.:.rtrans.nlllll'rcanbe
lut"llt<"(i at an• tunc TIM.-
~IUd}
Jll ~>thng:m un a ls' m ove m e nls
Ttlt:pfcr stn-sscd the im lll.ll"tanccurruwmgthl'radoo
equ1 pmcn t on camp us fo r
,.,ldlo fe st udent s tu jtt't
,,,luablceXpl't"lence,.-tthth•s
l)pt•ufrtst'arch Studl'-nba~
lbmg tht• equipmt-nl . bul
TU(-pft·rsa•d•ttakl-sabout SIX
lnUt.'li OUI Wllh a ri'Ct'IV('r to
ht•CUU\e J)I"OfiCII"nt "''llh it.
St ude nt s get ex per ie n ce
and rangt"S on a map . They
a r r a lso c:oo;pose d to th e
prublems of .telling up and
t"ilndoctmgthJs typc olstudy
Tlll'pfer mentioned some of
tlwproblemsolan dl ostody
l11c equ1pmen\1S e:oo;pensl\'e
and the rt'SCarcher needs
sona• proor ex p e ri e n ce
upt.•ratmg the ra dJOS Outside
Foresters will
discuss dutch
elm disease
Some of th e nat ion's
leadrngurbanfon-ste- rs v.ill
lead tbscussioos and ptt"Sent
ll'i.:LUrt'S March 2t and U at
the UWSP campu.<i.
Thest"seuionsanom te nded
for professiona ls who are
rl'llponst ble fM woodlots a nd
parks wilhm c it ies a nd
nllages or othl'r indi\·iduals
,.-host('lr.aninte-ffttlnit One
oi'lhetopics wllltx-ondutch
rim dise-ase. a major problem
fa_c ing fore!lt s thrOYghout
WniCOI\iin ,
Th e Wisconsin Park and
ltt'i.:reatronAssociationis co·
s ponso ring the co nfer e nc e
,.iththeunivcrsity. The relsa
feefor participatant.s.
Inte r es ted persons m ay
l!'flrollbyl'OII tactingtheofl'ice
~-:~tended__;'rvices at
r:u.loomtcrferencelnthearca
can be a problem Thi~typeof
s tudycstmrccons wning, tthe
rabb1ts a r~ monolol"t'd every
SIX hours , dav and night t
Ammals must bt' ltve and
lransmi tt en mul l be
secu rely fat tene-d to the
:~ntma ls. )'Ct not lnlf'rft'ring
'"' ll h the anima l '•
mo•·ements. Finally, a computerl~ alm05t:~nrcess•tytor
com pr hng the quantU ies of
data from th 1s ty pe of
tt.'SCa rch.
About -tO s tuden ll ha•·c
bcen in,•oh·ed with the slud y
S..veral ,.·dd.lifetlasseshh·e
beenuuttosee th eequipme nt
111 11liC.' . An)' wildlife .tludent
.,.·anting tu get involved wi th
thc study c an CQntac t ll.ay
Anderson. CN H
Toepfe r sa•d that radio'
t(•lcme try 11 a va luablt
,.,ldli fe research tool . Uut it
should be used only if there 11
nu other altcrnatl\"t' method
ufcondu-c hngthe study . ''We
h:n•e the ca pability of
foll u ..·rnga lrnost a ny ammal
W1scon s•n ."" said Toepfer
nw CNR hopes to trap 1 deer
ht·e m the a rea norlh of
111
:~tusandputalransrnJIIer
~;~~;~.~~~::::;,~" q~~','~r '~:;!·
l.•~t·atlliiLOftht•anlmalcan(loe
tk•krm~rlt"(itu '"lthm ~0 ft>el
Shale oil e xtraction
could cause dust storms
nar~rr~~ !o!.~~m!:~~·
l"(pr.....-d
soli~ ·~a
n-a l threlll
'l'fllli!>IIUIU'rl> ,IUdrt'C4'1\'l'tl
th,ot .. en'\bt'tlln tht• prarnt•
··h••·kt•n ~h•d) ,.en• mod1fll-d
rufltr.obblb Tht•tranl>nlllll'r
amlban,-r,..,anol'nclost'd ln
t' utloor~ made of d.:-ntal
...·nlhc •tho.· ~me ma lt•nal
US<-dmth.ontalplal<-'1" The
t-ullan,.clghJOgrams,.h•ch
•~ abuutl pt-r n•nt ol the- body
'"l'll!-hl of thor rabtHt
ltowofthcflntrabbltJOtolxntuiHtorl-d ,.as "" r\umlly,""a
h• o ~ r·:or -uld female Last
Februar~, she ,.·as captun-d
~~~~:~~-~ :r~~~~~~c~~:n~;~-
~~~~~.~l~e;:s(':~ :~~~~;~:r:~o ~.:~:;:~ ~;u~~:r:.!'d r~l~-~~·;, t~:Sg ~oo&iiiii=;:;~2~~~:;.~fR
~:'::r:'d~s~lt~r~~lta~~ :~uu~~':':s il~~aJOeb:~l:l~-~= ~t'~fla!~ h~~~ no,.!'::~~~
~)!'!~nColorado.IJtah and ~~:::~c~n rr!mcosn::~e~7!~~ :!~"!~gat~:~~ 0 ;~,'::';:Y;
llolumga rlne r , a specralist
llhl.llb."" saod Baumgartner
Interior
o\ tent..all\'1' plan to fill up
,.,th the res tor a tion of su r -
"compl t<lel y counter to
"'-t."t'per slopc.-s could hmdcr
revewet:U •on of lands that
would bC' filled .afl r r surfact•
..., h•rsht-ds
m wlldh fc. wrote
:-,~t~~':"
~~ ~~~ !~~~~~!.t~,t!;~ ~~;~·~~s~o:a~~to ~==~
th~ I nd m the- East "' ::tl,:~= :~~~-~~~P~
lie noted that a com ·
~~:;~ ';;~n~a,!-J: ~~~;~:
• ~-,·~~~ t:! ~';.~~~~~~r!f::~~ ~h~ {f'~~~~:~ f[~~~~t'l~1 ~:',grh;
ut
SPECIAL
,.hrle ,.-c.anng the
llwfin..t mll)'-'r phasrof~hr:
~~·;e~;~!f!'~ c_a~:::~ :a,~l~-~~~~~ddr:~~~~ 1 ~·tt~ u'~ :.~u~~~~~~r~~~wr!~~
l!r.'l T"':'
St.'lond
pha5e of
;!,: ~~~~~~!"::~ ~~~:~~
~:::,~;"'!~;tsst't',.:=; ~~~:
~:::-~~~~ n::~ r~~~:~"a
~:;,',~:~,.:.~ . t'"r,~,~tu t:~';!,J~~~
:•·:~;.:~~~!r~h~!~a;\~~~~~ o~
tertllof) TIM.• females n:t•·c
h•nded tu stay 111 the are-a
.. ht·n• rcl ea5ed All the
transplanwd rabbi!$ sta)t'd
!ioOillt',.hcn: llllheotrn of the
MD 20-20 GOLD
Buy One at $1.19
Get 2nd Bottle 1/2 Price
SOUTH POINT
BEER & LIQUOR
Ste•e111 Pol11t
Ope" o .n., Till 9 :00 P.M.
21 00 Chor ro: h
lloooc-X>OOCC_X>O_>OO_ _ _ _,..
'\.
•
Sports
Pointers split two
uyvp-P-O_I_N_T_E_R
by Jimlla~~:ll
Women cagers
Win state berth
by Dine Plet~JI
For the fint time in the
school's his tory the UWSP
.,..omt'ns basketball team '<'' ill
rt'prHft\t Stt-\'ens Point at the
s tatt' tournamf'nl to be held 10
~tad1son
The Pointer women
.:arned tha t right th1s past wed!
by defeating Stout and Eau
Oa1re 1n ther fina.l conference
games This left the P ointer-s
"'1th 3 .._I conference record
good enough for s«ond pia~
behind l..aC1"05-H a nd a berth 10
~l ad1son
Pomt's hrst game thlS wed!
was ""'lth Eau C\a 1~ ibursd3y, Feb 14
Ste~ns Point
wont~ iame- "7-39 ThlS game
was ('Oined by co.~ch Marilyn
Sch.,..·ara as. " the game of the
~ason-- because Ea u Oa1re
and Stevens Pomt w~r~ !led for
second 3nd lht' wmner would
ASouad
Diamoad
lavestmeat
a g
weekend, playing 1n two
ts, the Pointer c agcors
e
a split. Aller lo.ing to
uper~or , 91-il. the Pointers
bounced baclt with a 110-72 win
over ruver f'all\.
probably gain the rl&}lt to the
s tnte tournament.
Point came out strong, talr.ing
an t I point lead at the end of the
lint quarter and stretching it to
IS poinl5 by lnte.r-misllon. In the
S«<nd half though. Stevens
Point ~d a lull u Eau Claire
c:.ame r-oaring back to win 6
pomts bd~ Point regained
conlrol to hold on .
Viclr.J flellem ltd the Pointer
attack with 16 points .,.-bile
~1ar-y &hulu a nd Barb Deic:hl
each conlributed I and 7 points
respeoctively.
Saturday, Feb. II, Stevens
Po1nt traveled to Stout .,..here
the vktory they earned ga,.·e
thm~ the ri&ht to pLay in the
s tate tourney. 1'l1e outcome was
never 1n doubt as Stevens Point
led throughout the entire game
a nd won handily, 13-21. The
Pointer women shot a high.ly
respeoctable 42 perttnt from the
field as they ral.sotd theirHuon's record to t-2. Jan
Gundelfinger ripped the nets for
17 points while teammate
Ma rcia Engebretson rimmed
1$.
In a game played Feb. 9,
Superior came to town and
found themselves on the short
end of a &18 score.
Both teamsslarted c:old and it
took Stevens Point over five
minutes to sco~ their first
point. At the end of the first
s tanu · Point led 12-3.
By
lhe advantage roae to 21-7.
In the 5ot'CtlfKI half. Point
maintained their domi nance
mostly by shooting a torrid 60
per~ent from the ne ld and fi1
perc:mt from the charity stripe.
Margart't &hmelttr and Jan
Gundelfing~ uc:h poured in I
pcnnts while J:>rte Simon added 7
and Barb Dekh e.
ln non~rrroc:e: u.rnes this
week, Point will tnvel to EauO a ire Wednesday, Feb. 20.
bd~ bolting Madison at 1
p.m . in the Berg Gym.
"We didn't play ,.·ell," Coach
Bol:t~ Krueger said ~f the
Superior contest. "'I'he turn·
overs killed us. At one Ume In
the fir~t half, we w~e down by
three. wM-n rive coru«utive
times comina down court we
.,..,~unable to get off a shot."
"The bi&&~ lhrir lead. IM'
more ~on f idence Superior
SMmtd to gain, •· conc:ludfd
Kruqer.
Pointer guard Phil ,.lerg
finished with 18 points a nd 10
rebounds while center Man
Smith collected 12 points and
eight boards. Yet together they
.,.·ere unable to match the
scoring
performance
of
Superior's Lafayette Collins.
The freshman guard, who
entered the game as the conferenu's Jeadins KOrtr with a
26.1 ave-rage per game, put on a
dau!ing 34 pcrint show. Coupltd
with teamma te Jim Ha pp'a :zo
points, the two players ac·
counted for well over hall the
Yellowja~ket point total.
"Collins shot something like
12 of IS the second half,"
relatN Coa~h Kruf'ger.
At
limes It seemed he was s hoaling
with radar. He hit on six or
seven shots In a row at one time.
I don't think any guy In the
~onference can keep him from
shootins."
Saturday's contest at River
Falls pruented a b r iKhter
pl~ture for the pointers, who ltd
most of lhe way enroute to a 81>
72 vic: tory, The Pointttt hit on
22 of 28 free throws. and ~on·
nected on 48 per cent of their
field goal attempts.
" Wemadesomeenon, butm
general played a better game
than against Superior," slated
Coach K~er. " Matt Smith
was also moving real .,.-ell Ins ide, and w-e 101 the ball to him
down .......
Smith got lhe ball mough to
score 24 points while pull1ng
down 10 rebounds. Dave Welsh
added nine rtbounds. while
Uruce Weinkauf a nd Tom
Enlund KOrtd 18 a nd 14 points.
respt'<!tlvely.
"Both Wt'inkaur and EnJund
wt're moving better. and got
bt'ttu s hol5 than the previous
night," Krueger commenttd.
" Phil Jt'rg. and later Bru~
Weinka uf also did an t'xcellent
job of stopping Renklns."
· Jnck ltenklns, the Falcon's
s tar s.tnior, scort'd 26 points
against UWSP In the previous
encounter thb yea r. Saturday
he was held to eight points, and
was lugely IMffecUve.
On t-~eb I , the Stool Blue
Devils defeated the Pointers 92·
87 In an ovt"rtlme thriller. At
the end of ~ulaUon play the
score ....-as tied Sl-82. but the
by Marlil.ubuk
weeks ago s.aw lhe Rejectors of
the fndependent League defeat
tile Nada 60-lS. ibe Nads raced
to a 14·2 lead before the
ltejec:ton called lime-out. Aftrr
the time-out the Rejectors
a pplied a run court press to pull
out the victory. Milr.e Lynott
scored II points for lhe wlnnen.
• R'rut"'d • /,u,.,d
CJwo l#' ~M~'Ilt cot~ful#'IIC~
IUOCt:TTUlMS
In olher l~nt action,
lhe Independents hammem:l
the No Name.a 71·22 as Gary
Vorpahl pa~e.d lhe Independents With II points Late S
couldn' t keep up w1 th the
Extinct Speoc:ies as they l01t 76JZ Paul Woiu ltd the Species
with :ZI points M.r Lucky's
finally put it together to outKOrt Mothe-r Truckers n -JS.
Wayne IUus.ch neutd 29 for the
winners Tbe Casuals outpUytd
City Gardener'S A-JS. Steve
Kuckheim had 19 for the
Casuals Tbe Pt. T 's squeeuct
past R. P'.J. 49-46. as Mark
Ole jniea.ak ~Cored 10 points in
that victory.
Tim O'Dell scored II points to
lead the wlnnen. when the
Independents recorded thei r
second victory of the week.
Uolding on In the cloalng
seconds, they nudged oot the
Golden Beill'll 47-46.
In dorm action or two weeka
ago, 3 S Sims defeated IS. Sima
-lt-31. Steve Snow scored
n
points for 3 S In other Sim a
games 4 S. beat IN. 86-19, Larry
Hebel sparked lhe rout with %2
POints Ta lented 3 N. Sim a
defe8ted a stubborn 2 S Sima
»-33 Bob Schultz had 9 points
ffK the vic:ton
2N Sm lthddeated4N n-Z:J,
Dale Timm scored 22 po~nts In
that win. In lheir J«ond game
that week, 2 N also beat 2 W S647 Bob R.o&e-ncrance Lallled t
points to ie:ad the wlnnen. In
Wa tson competition 2 E .
defeated 4 W 94-14 Steve Hrin
lead the attack wtth 22 points.
Pray Hall's 4 w. hammered 1 E .
101·23, Omnia Rultmond 'ed 4
W with 33 points. In 8un'ouiha
Hall act~ 2 W. th.raahed 3 S. n21. 11rewayne Schmidt netted 21
the conc:lWiion of the first hair.
Weinkauf and Phil Jers tied for
the scoring lead, each totalling
T1 points.
Sa turday's contest proved
frullful as the pOinters edged
LaCrosse 73-66. LaCrosse's all
confennce forward Erie HaUl
tallied 34 of the Indian's 66
point.s, while the Pointers
featund balanced scorlns ltd
by Welnbul's IS points. Tom
En.lund, Dave Welsh. and Bob
Omelin.1 completed the major
portion of Poh'lt's scoring wllh
12. II and 10 points, rupee·
lively.
Swimmers suffer
triple defeat
by Tom Ealud
It 11 a rare coa~h who praiSeS
h1s team following three ckfeal5
but that is exacUy what UWSP
swl mmlng~oa~h Lynn Blair did
last .,..-eek.
More Important to Blair than
his tum 's 51-SS lou to UWMIIwaukee, S&-56 defeat to UWl.aCros.se. and 61-4S lou to UWStoot wa.s tht' fact tha t his long
range goals are materialldng.
"Despite the 106St'S, I'm at\11
pleased with the team,'' said the
UWSP coach. "Our main goal is
slillto do well in the conference
meet. I have hoped all year that
"'·e would finisbJ.n,Jhe top three
In the conferen~ meet. After
las t week It is looking better
than ever th;lt. we will a~hleve
that goal."
Blair has rated LaCrosse as
the team the Pointers must beat
If they are to reach that top
three lie thinb lhe two point
los.s to the Indians ia an encooraging sign.
"We swam very well against
LaCrosse," Blair said, " but
they had too much depth for us
1n thts head to head com·
pet1tion In lhe confrrtne:e meet
11 w111 be different because other
schools wilt be there who can
beat tMm Actually 11 waa a
Athletes feet step on
intramural challenges
The major contest or two
Pointers were no match In
overtime for the hot·shootln&
Blue Devils. The contest was
highlighted by a half-court shot
by Bruce Weinkauf swished at
poinlJJ to lead 2 W r-· ran Winter
M:Ort'tl 26 polnlll to lead 2 N
Uurrooghs past I S Burroughs
BJ-:13
Comoetltlon
1n
the
Organization Le ague saw
ftOTC ~queak p.aat the Vets II
team 43-42 Dennis Byr-nes took
game honoi'1 for HOTC with 18
polntJ. In the otht'r gMme. 8SC
II outplayed VetJ 1. n -24. Emir
Mitchell ltd fiSC II with :ZO
polntJ.
In Fraternity League action
PSE outscored TKE 31-19. Craig
Gaveren scored 17 points for
PSE. A game which wasn't
dec1ded until the c:loalng
secondaaawSTG defeatSPE 4631. Harry Babc:od dominated
play for the STC with l2 points.
I Athletes Feet
2. Re}Kton
J 8SC I
4 2 w. Wataon
S. Extinct Spedea
I . Nada
7. 2 N. Smith
1. 3 N. Sima
• . Cuu.als
10. 4W. Pny
close meet and it all came down
to the last ~Jay."
That decisive event was the:
-100 yd. freestyle relay that the
Pointers lo&t by .9 seconds.
Earlier in the meet numt'I'OUI
Point athletes set the fastest
times or their careers, fnshmm Dick Jesse In the 1000 yd.
freestyle UI :O!UI and SOO yd.
freestyle IS : ~.7), Milr.e Slagle
in the 1000 yd. freesty le
110:31.2l, JeffHilllnthe:ZOOIM
12: 11.91, and Scott Schrage In
the 200 yd. freestyle II:S5.7).
Slagle's performance set a new
school and UWSP pool record.
Blair was pleased with worlr.
of his diven, freshmen Tom
McMahon and Ken Kultldr..
"The divers are Improving,"
said Blair. " They a re getting
muc:h mo~ c:onslatent. This will
help us." McMahon scored 131.3
in one meter diving and ti9.S in
three meter diving. KuWck
totaled
131.3 and
179.S
respectively.
Alter the dOH loa, Feb. IS
to UW-MIIwaukee. Blair was
rf'gretti.Dg a switc.h he didn' t
malr.e that mi&}lt have changed
the outcome. Apin the meet
was decided in 1M 400 yd
freestyle relay.
" If l.,..•ould have taken Hill out
of the 400 yd. relay and put him
in the breaststroke we probably
would have won the: meet," the
Pointer coach s.ald. " It's IOtlgh
to decide who to swim where
when yoo have limited numbers, but that's aU hindsight. In
the 400 yd. freestyle relay UWM
swam five seconds faster than
their pr-evious best. We swam
our fastest lime of the year
13:30. 11 and s till lost."
Two Pointers set records In
the UWM meet. Hill aet a pool
record with a time of t0:41.2 In
the 1000 yd. freestyle and Slagle
set pool and Khool recorda with
a I :50.4 time In the 200 yd.
freestyle.
Blair sees Stoot u the leam
that will fight for lhe confrrence
championship with Eau Claire
so he was not overly concerned
with a more onMided loss to the
Blue Devils.
' "Th~e was no way we c:ouJd
have beaten Stout, they hid
just too much depth for us."
The Pointer's season record
now s tands at J-3 ln the conferft~Cf: and s-7 overall, eompared to last year's 1-14 mart
and last place conf~ence flnlsh.
"I've &01 the bat pwp ol
freshmen In the state Wllvualty
system," said Blair. '"They
don't get down, and keep a
tremendous me:ntaJ auJtude.
It's amazloa wbat they are
doi ng, they Ju.t tnp lm-
_...__
=·-=~super~~
F~ory _21 . 1974
THE POINTER
Poge 17
Watson's 2 fast
rolls to easy win
l'o'lltson 't 2 " ~·a~nllam ­
"'"'"' I S Wat10n 1 116~ Cui
t:retrnllardtl!ld2" · "·•tll21. 1n
Kn11tzrnllaii, J~'
lntht-otlltf'jlami'SSCIIIoltto
IISC I i't·37 Gary .\loore nettrd
2Spotnt.. forliSC t
Jon• Oark. dtrector cw ltl·
tramu.r-all, "'""llyllatedtllat
att play-off ltlmH and lM
~~~~n•poon~hlp "'ill be de-cided
befortlptlntbrullll!e reuon
forthisehanltl'OI'l'l"l.Styeari$
IMI m;on)' of 1M te;oml "hkh
qwhloed for a , .ay -o ll be!'th
outlnt~2
~:
13-D. Tom Z:.ml$ KOnd 3
fortMwonnft'lln llarurn ll all
competolion2 t; couldn't kffP
up .. Hh 1 t: as they· lolt-....~
IJale llel"''ll did moat of tile
5e:OI'IftKaJIIetalllfld:t!ptnn~S
for IE
In Strut ll a!l action, 3S
norrdan•.uy .. tno•·tt"zS as
1\'C"'IIOI 'ne<~ndll ion"·henlh ey
relurMdC1arklle~ki11Jinto
lll~· ,.·onS1-38SiP>'l'Snowon«
Wrestlers lose three
b) Te m ~:nlun d
The' u~s
........u,"'
tum
lladtMtrstreailoftot\·rncon_...m-.. ltulttmeoet"'"' 1\uned
ontoalhreemeoetloltna:•tteak
··~\ "fl'll
lnacoaltf'ence&h-dolt.'ll
~-eb ' · Coad't Rec W~eb
l'oontrn ..-ere bntrn by un·
defeatrdWllitl'Wiit'l" . .l They
~liOlottthenonconlel'fliC'l' t'eb
I meet •1111111 Manltato State
!7-1. and " 'n'l' di-luted by
SoUI.hi>Uot.aont'fO 11,23-17
\It m«llwereaway
Thl' loun dropped tht'
l'otmereonfl'l'f'fl('l'rl'onlrdto4I..Jndo~etaUtheyarel-4on dwol
o-ul'hen!i$~toon
til" thr three de feall u me
~&alMI till' 10111-hnt oppot.~tian
t· ws., ..-,u rxe ~~~ year
1\ . hll~·atetllundefutedandiS
tM te•m to beat 1!1 thP eon
ft'l"eoce, acrordtn& to ~•du
\lanhto State and South
lbltoUt~peteuoU...Sortb
<: rntnl Conference. wlltch
~· ocb~o~yl , "llabttoutofour
lu, ..... "
" Wc~tbecause
..·e ..-relllrd
dd"n11vely uutead of offrnwve-ly ," uid Wl(b
" WP
d~~~~~J..~=;~~
Ptn
We-..:ouldcetealllthtun -
~rneathand,.,ouJdn ' IU'JIOiet
nut
Thew team• "''t'l'f also
mo.xhstronge r phyaicatty than
'" f' W~ "
n.-
Pouotrnl'le'Ver reaUy
thruumed Wbitl'Waltr ulhe
Warha .. u ..·oneightolthetm
matdoeti W}llle-wllf'l'plolfto
~ laat.uon.talu"'l Nlleadon
" ll'lalntlll'ttlandt:Mpound
d auea. Lllby Si.doff 11341, oi
t WSP , then won hh fifth
eonttf'~matdlwltOIItaku
.,.2
The only othtf' UWSP
poonta came on Pee V.' ee
\I~Jil'T '•I1Ntperiodplntnllle
lSI ~lu" Mudler also tJ :1--0m
the 1'011-fl'rfnl't'
Whllf"'altf'
opponentJ handed StennJ
I'Olllt't l'elf!Jooro • tiii, RI(Il
ll ucheJ t iS •. Rlll6 Kruc1;er
Tllf l'otntersa lrnot l pulledan
upllof! qalnst SoW. D.alcota ••
lhPSCOI'l''"'Utied17·11with
onl)' the heavyweight match
rematntii(J
Steve.. PQilll fell
brhond 17-5 but made~ 1ood
comebillek on a pin by lllnt1
t li11, a J.-2wmby Rld<Sl'lptn
, 11'7 1, and a 4..0 ~ictory by
Krlll'&tf' I UOI
Heavywl'llllt
JollnliOIIwuptnnedinthtflnt
periOdtoendthemeet.
o t lltU andJOf'JOOn~Gn t ll "" t l ,
thP:trfirslconlnt"''K'f~of
Uw~·ear '4'1Cb"Utm~
woth me ..·uha•·b btliJ:~wa
rhanceto r"'-"'le1Mioo5&onthfo
confcrennono~MaKh~
'1llf'ir lndt
~rc
•·ery
•trona
:.:;tn,;r•:;•::~~;· u:·:ant:i
beaten Adllliii~·. J fplt .. r...-err
tn iwllt'l" rond•t1011
In 1M
ronfertnfp mppt lhP resuh
rould be doffnent becauw
llthf'l' lac-ton ai'P on•·ol•·ed
Thetr ..·reJOill'r.<couldlo5eto
othtrconfHI'ti('PoppoMMUplu.
1M lftdonp and lllfk play a
Pi'rl u .. outdsulltakrourbnt
eflortto"·•n "
T1lC' Po1ntrrs found tMm ·
Hh'f'J behmd 11·0 •&••ntt
) l aailato Stat• bffllf'f' MlldiPr
tiSI I ...on 111-l Wayne II1!1U
t t67 t follo"·ed ..·othaponlni 'SII
of the lint prnod and 1M
Poonlri'IC'Ofln(I"'UO\'erl«ihe
a(latn took aamp honon for s S.
" 'llt!tlpocnts. AfiiiiC11Ur1prftl;
ll~lprd 3 N. IC'Or'1! a 62·34 "'n
o~er • S Bob t ll ooda&le l
SchulUOO!!Idl7toleac!JN In
Sm1th llall compehlion. a
po"·erlu12N . had little trouble
(IHUn(lput 4 S .. IMfinaiiC'Or~
~tandln(l at SI.J I. Bob It·
era~ Ull>fd t• pOints to Uk~
Ulm' honors
In fr a te r ni ty act ion, SP E
outplayed STG In the HCOnd
half tocu5t toa~1wln
Wayne Zunk~r nettrd 20points
forS I't: A"'f'IIHtabtit.hf'dfast
brrakledPSE toa6l-JI victory
o•·er t '"'k Br Dan Zorn Kored
~ potnts on that wilo. In anotlltr
dOlOr contest, Sl' outlasted TKE
tn 1M d01in1 ~ond$ to win 4,._
-u ltay lllland .rid Ma rt)'
Wackeruchhad t4pointslor
U... winnen.
TheExtilll'ISpte01!$laJtwftk
"'ere~hallen&ed by theGol~n
Bur• in th~ l ndepencknt
Ll:aJIIl',b\llmanagedtowln71·
Sl Dtnnis Stn1111 Kored :t! In
that
The Caau.b th.ruMd
theCr utch klc:bral l -46,,.·1thZO
: : : by l h e jtor '• Tom
1
Games"' the Oraarnu tlon
Ll:allll'&aW Veu II OVt'l"p1111'tt'
\'elll!n-36, with :r1 points by
BobSchilfb.aou«and29polntl
by Mob IWoodllfkl Lllbenow
the poUobdny of arnnttrc a
rteJOO.IJ tdl'Ca~ of lhe ma,lor
play-offsamn
We aim to please
t.:dt t ~ntilt'
plcasecuns.idcrth.:ot thcy.:ore
for a pur~ . We
pub li sh some t hing f u r
c•·cryone .:ond some Pt'Ople
are alwayJ looking f o r
m osla kes .
••n
Women w in track meets
ll)' ll la nrl'iuu
'The Pomtt'l" ,.-om.,..·s track
tum eully defnted three
other
opponenb
tn
a
q~&:ulran~tlllarmHIMidt'eb I
Slr•·em.,oi ntta ll ied 1 ~2poinll,
"'llile t:au Claire came in
Halnd ••th IS poinu follovoed
~,:"ert'alls .. t\J'lZlandStout
.,Ointeapturrdl'lghtlinllout
...,
lf youfind
n11stakesm 11\ts publication,
there
GI'Orllelle Hunt m the mile
K.om t,rtdoertooltar>rs~in the
•andUofdVerca uterenlnlhe
4411. The team of ShouldtB.
Zuelldorl, MaryVanderbe,and
LyM lt errmanntu rnl'd In tile
"'iMin& time in 1M 4-lap relay
The Pointrnt ' ne•t IT!Mt II
f'eb. 23 at Stevrnl Poinl Are~~
ll tlhSc:hool .
... __..
-
... _ ,
SHIPPY
SHOES
MAIN AT WATER
of nu>t• e~en11 and fitlWttd
..ro:oncl~ntht-Gihere-ent lntht
~hot put . St.,.·nn; I'OIIIIgr-abbed
'lthtnlllhPRIIY""'erl'ahttlr
p5ydlt'd 0111 ~lore lhr mftl
becaw.r- Mankato had ihlli out
th;llkOioll andbe;otV.1utl""'att'l"
Tllceahbeto(,.-rHtiPrtJbetl"t
on the s rc than •n ow- con·
ICrrMe 1 tlootlihl tllr IIC'ON!
tholll4 llave bepn closer
becaUM"('aiTKilH."Iooloal4fm 142dau. ~nd JohMOn, .,-~~g
taatl-2onHwt , shouldt..vewon
and MIM'llcr came eiOIOr to a
IIM!topfour outol•l•placn tn
tM-mol•rvn the)· t..d U...top
thl't'l'flntthl'rs
fin~ place wtnnrn r.... tbr
PotnLers ..·creShetlaShoulden
lntMSOyarddalh t l .l i,Sue
Zuelldorl ~~ the Z2e 13 .1 1,
t>rilb)· \'ercautereninlhe4411
t 17~ J. Jiftt'Adanuin thetuch
JUmp t ~'l"t , Chrll C11nde,_
tn the shot pt!l (.10"7"1,
p~n "
ITALIAN RAVIOLI
SPAGHETTI
$1. ?S per person
Golden· Deep Fried Fish
Crtspy French Fries
Cr eafii.Y Cole Sla~t~
Homemade lo• f of
8re1d ' &Jtter
ALL DINNERS INCLUDE SALAD
AND HOT ITALIAN BREAD!
..
BILL'S PIZZA
Downtown Stau111 'oint
' ho- J44.9SS1
O.liury S."tca 0.. City
\
•
Clearing air for non-smokers
Letters To The Editor
POINTER
Firing protested
uyvp
Upl'n lrtttr
I h.tH' }U:.t completed readm~<:
.m arttdt• entttled •·Tcnur('d
F';,culh 1-"tn, r ,.htch appea n
In tht.'. FM)
7 ISSUe Of the
l' n ln t rr A llo~ me to exprt"55
m) th s~o:u~ t .tl ~ou r dcrt~IOn to
ft rl.' ont• l'h:tri('S Rumsey
1\lstOJ') lk-po~rtment Puttmg
,t .. tdt• tlw l;u·t that \OU ha'~
....,,_." Itt to dts reiard th..
H'C'Ommt•ndatiOns of ~our
pt.•r-.onall~ tmpaneled R«or'l ·
"Hk' r ;tlt M Commllt l."e' . II IS m~
!hat Hum 51') ' :-~
dtsmtSS.1 1 ts a g ra,•e mts take on
yo ur bcht.lf I a m I(Cnumely
con fu '!>td a:~ to wh\' \ ' OU .,.,ould
let a quahl) mstru.ctOr such a:s
Rums<'~ lca\'1' lhts untveNII)
op1r1111n
\1 a umt•.,., hcn th iSUO t \l'r!i.tl)'
ts tr) mg tn mcrrase en rollmt'nt
I ftnd II hard to JUSttf ~ lhr hnng
oltop-nocch m"tructo rs Beltcvr
tl or not. ~me peo ple are ~ 1111
int'-•rcs tt•d 111 rece ivmg nn
educu t ton. an toducat ton by
quahht'd aod t"Omj)f'ttnt ln·
~ trut"tors such u Rumst)' r or
ft'ar th3t )OU diKard mc.- as
l){'lllg unable to sud~e l"d hkt' to
"""'~t hat! kn~ of .... nat I !>pea k
Hoth m~ par~nts a rt' edut"ators
and I mtend to folio.,., them m
tht' pursw t of th.1 t f1cld In nt)"
opm10n, Humscy IS 1mnwnsely
more quali f ied th a n the
nmsorit~ of Instructors I ha\"t'
~1d up to, and mcludm~. this
~·mes ter
If I m1ght $3) m clos1ng. s1r.
th1s 1ssue 1s representatwe of
the gro.,.,mg nft Ln\'oh·ed m
;tdmlmst ra tuln·student affa1rs.
I ~·ha llenge )' OU , 1f you are of
firm commitment, to rl'Spond··
1f you see fit not to--s1lenee ca n
501~ mut"h. If you cont1nue to
operate th1S Ufil\'erslly as tS
apparent n~· . you ""'Ill find that
tht' phenomenon of dt"C'rt.asmg
l'flrollment .... 111 bt- t\'tn morf!
phtmomenal. and I hope that I
ca n be personally rt"!iponluble
for encou ragJng many to stay
a ....·a y
ta)o ff o f (.llarlnRum~) Of tht'
l>t'partment of History .\hxh
as I m1ght ""ISh to re:spond to
you tn ordtr to provuie you w1th
the bast-S of the JUdgmcntl'l
rnadt m thts case. l am not able
to do so on a d,·1ce of coun~l I
am personally \"ery frustrated
by my enforc:ed Sileo« 1n thne
mattns . and I understand )'OUr
c ha llengc.to
mt :~bout
rupond tng Your co ncluston
iibout stlen«. no ....-e\"f!r , 1s qutte
maccuute My non-re:!!ponse Is
Native American
tota lly altnbutable to the fact
that thts.,., note mattt'r ma) well
l•nd up m htlg:ltlon
I 3m dtsturbed by your ftn.al
t"OilCept m the leltt>r ""h1ch. as I
read rt . 1$ that smce you believe
that some members of the
faculty and the adm1 n1Strat10n
of thi!l un1versi ty a rc, In fa ct.
hurttng 11 . your rHponse would
~ to hurt 11 even more Per<onall)" 1 thmk that phtlosophy
IS not defms 1ble. but II IS of
cou r~ illn tndt\"ldual dlOICe
!'lncertly you n .
l.t't' Sherma n Urt'yhr ~
( "h anct llor
Week coming
To lhr l ' W!'W ("ommuntty:
Th('
N:llivc
,\ mcrlcan
Awarent"'t.5 Wt-ek ""' Ill be held
~larc h t I through 16 We an•
an t1C1pat1ng hostmg some \ 't'f')'
tnformall\'e s peaker s fro m
Wounded Knee. hill\'tng ~lr
Wront" and Mr :"elsoo d1scu.s&
thelt
boo k."" Who 's
The
Savage.. ..
The grand ftna le
w1ll be a pow wow . See the nut
l' ointt'r to r more exac t
!>Cheduling
A . I.K.U.
SMILE!
£A'r
TH£
LAHS
160
169.95
) I OAX E $80.00
5 10 AX S 105.oi 5
810 AX SI JO.SO
710 AX S104.9S
.....
. . ..
S599S
$0095
St49 95
144 . 15
149 . 95
159 . 1115
174 . 115
1 171 . 95
Al l M odt'IICOO"T>t ~~- ""'' "~- . dull CO..I , ml9"tti>C
C...Ottodljoi -Jfol llplu<;J ".....
8 -' ' ,.._ • -
, riOyOUro<'ttt n\Utri'OIVIl'"' ·
..,,.,. PA•ll....., I.e-- .....,r.,.lv
[}DOo1Jrum
Phone 341-4005 - 1209 Seco:'ld Street -
I am calling upon non·
sm okers to speak up and voice
thetr discontent
As fa r as
class r ooms a r e conce rned ,
there a r e fire ordinances
prohtbl!mg smoking but many
professors refuse to enforce it.
Some C\'Cn set 11 poor example
by s moking in class themuh·n
I would like to~ this rtttifl«l
LN us clea r the air of this
matter oncr and for all and lht'n
,..t' all will be able to brtathe n
lillie ensicr !
\'oun truly,
.l u.H•ph!-ilrnklr.,.,·icl
Dramas called
sexist discrimination
To th r t:dhor :
The purpost- of th1s letter IS to
\enfy In l' rtnt .,.,hat many
..,omen m;~y a lread)' know ~ the
l"nu·ersi ty Theatrt'·s produ<"·
uon of Th t' l.r"on and \\ oyrrck
.... as a d1s pln )" of se xis t
discrimmat 10n
No one who SZIW the
production ,..·ou ld doub t the
dramatiC tffectt\'eness
ol e1ther play
llo-.·e,·er ,
both
Tht'
IA"UOn
and
\\ u)l,.l"k reach thCif drnmutlt'
dimax
m
the
s exual
degradation of ,.. omen. a fact
that 1s unjustihoble m 197~ •
l's pccu•lly m ""educalionnl "
t he:~ tre
It ill my sincere hope tha t the
University Theat re .,.,.,11 m the
future avoid producing plays In
which the dignity of women is
sncnfit"ed to dra ma , a deity ""'ho
was :1 '" m:~le chau\•lnist pig "
last \l"tek
l.~dla
\bell
Review hits
sour note
'''"
Uon.a ld W«drn
1:!18ald.,., in lbll
Dreyfus replies
to Weeden
tlrar'l r \\ ,.t"drn
1lu5 IS m rrsponsc" to )OUr
lrth.'r of f-"t'b 8 concernmg tht'
To tht' f'dltor :
ln rKmt years-.·rha \-e hea rd
much about the dangrrs of
l"II(Mt!ltt' smolung. AI this potnl
m t1mt' let us turn our attention
to rile rtl{hts of non-smokt'rs and
t c lltudes of smnkers . tr n
.. m t: wants to kill himself or
that"s th e ~t bu.smH!I
WI I am SICk and ti r<'d of being
'ub)t"C'tt"d to d.at\J!,erous and
'omellmes ille~;al le\·els of
carbon monoxtde and othc'r
c qc nrt'ltt' p o lluta nu 111
classrooms aod cls~·here
Let us exnm.ne some hnb1ts of
"mokers They light up thetr
l"llnct>r st1cks and then dtscard
the used m:llchH on tbe fl oor
Then they nick thetr ashes on
tht· noor or'" na mmable paper
C"UOI!I
Unnals m mms rooms
o1 rt' plugged up ,._.Hh c1ga rtlti'S
Someh~· smoke al..,·ays seems
to no ....· 3way from the smoker
mto someone else's tyts . In
addi tion. ma ny lounge chairs
h.:I\' C holes in the upholstery
from clg<~ r ene burns In onr
.,.,ord . s molc~ in general a~
· ·1n cons1dente "' of others
Scmt are obii\'IOUS of what they
do. while others a re arrogant
abou t 11 Smokers should bear
m m1od that someonr else has to
clean up thei r mess. lnd denUy.
we pay for it through tuition
thr f'dltor :
lt"s really a sh:'imt' you ha\·e
to ha\·e mus1cal t'\"t'nt s on the
le,·t'l of tht' W31"53W Ph.Jlha rmomc rev1t'wed by l!Omeone
wtth the muSIC Il l knowledge of a
i\lu.'iic 100 dropout Mr Ryan
sotuds hke a typ1cnl pseudo·
mus1c 1an ,..ho should st1ck to
To
~~~~e;~"!h,;~ ~:~::~~~~
on hts le\'t'l of mll'lilcal lll·
lelhllt'nN' An)'Ont" .,.,ho ca n't
tell the d1fference betwten an
oboe and a shoe horn certamly
could not be a ny judgt of an
a r t l lH s uch a s Ste f an111
WO)"In-."ICL
I SUPIKille I really shouldn't be
surprised that a rt"•iew of th1s
quality would be allo.,.,ed 1n the
f'olntt1' Considering the qua lity
ot the papt'r . 11 st't'mS natur a l
'lpl f'<l :
'likt' (' hlumrnto
IKIIt' r l> tu the editor s hould be s ubmitt~d by Friday. n 1e y
mus t br ty prd . double-spaced and no morr than 300 words
long .
,\II le- tte r s to tht rdltor mu.s t 1M' slgnrd by the "''rllers .
ll o"'e' ·e r . the namt' may be withhe ld fr om publication for
"' h a t the edltOt' dee ms good :~n d s ufllclrnt r e ason.
From the President
b)" J im Hamilt on
Over the pa st th r ee weeks .
those of you who a r e in ·
terested have been reading or
h ear~ng abo ut Student
C:overnment "s c h nr ge tha t
the admims t r ation at the
Unt\·e r si ty IS over -fund ed at
the ex pense of the in s tructt onal and o ther a reas .
In CO OJUOCIIOn Wl lh t h e
c harge . a presentalton of the
mfo r matton "''e have com·
ptled wa s conducted, at our
rc<tuest , tn the Chancellor 's
o ffi ce last T hurs da y
It was a umque Sit ua tion
that I w1sh ever y s tudent
couJd experte nce a t some
lime in his lt fe . let a lone in his
college ca r eer
I . for one,
have never fe lt so patronized
as a s tudent , let a lone the
re presentative fo r a ll the
s tude nts on cam p us, a s I fe lt
a t the end of that meeting .
The meeting proceeded
generally as !ollows .
Bob
lladzinsk 1 ;:~nd I made our
presentatron to the various
de pa r tment heads within the
adminis tration . The people
present liste ned ver y poli te ly
to the presentatio n wh ich wa s
fo llowed by questions a nd
comments about the facts and
fig ures we had used. The
administration
throughout
defended t heir b ud ge t i n g
pr a <: tlces as in the best in·
terest o f the university in the
lo ng r.ange . After a per iod of
tune . 11 IS m y opin ion that the
a dmini s tr a t ion pe rceived
they had convinced us that we
wer e "'Tong , which they had
not
ihe admi ni s t ration
pre s ent then began t o
c n t 1C1Ze the way in wh ich we
hand led our c a sell .c . : a r ·
ticles in the Pol nt~r . com ments o n the radi o, a nd
s t atements at bot h th e
s t udent a nd facult y govern ·
me nt m ee ting . 1
Every
c harge was leveled from the
poin t of view that we were
doing it for fun but we should
have kept quiet.
Lei me assure the s tudents
which I r e present th a t I am
not doing it for fun . beca use
it 's not fun . I' m n ot goi ng to
keep quie t because I do no t
believe I would be acting in
the bes t inter es t o f the
s tudents to do s o .
I hBve already devoted
many s ta ff and personal
hours to this project because I
beli e ve we are doing th e r ight
thing in the best Interes t ol
our unive r sity. I will continue
to apply pressure until the
s tud e nt 's e ducation Is no
longer be.ing comprom ised.
Scholarships available
All UWSI~ d~pa.rtmcnl
h<'ads hll\'e rt"Cl't\'td packels
cont:umng scholarshtp in·
formation for the follovoing
thn.'t"ScholarshtpprG~;rams
IJ.o.•r~~:ftl Ball : Each ~·e:~r.
bo.•t..,L'C'II 1:!-:!0sctkll ;~rshtpi '"
tht• amount of Stoo and S:l!O
an• awarded to
annual
community
J~no.-ht Ball
t'nlt>na are
br~d and tncludl' need.
a•·alkmtc achti'\'Crneru and
dl•p;Himenlal
recom nh•ndatlon
t\lumnt LeaderShip and
S..-r\ oee ,\ ..·anb Thl- UWSP
\lumm .USOC1ation
,o>~ard s
Thomb II
UWSP d.111un .
~tudt'ntsfromlhe!X'ocet'Cbof
the
rcprt'$t"nlthf-largestdollar
amount St'hot:arshlp Jllt'n
annuall~ un c:ampus tpast
~"'ar s
noo frt' s hman .
..OJihumort•. S750 jun1or and
~111ur a .. ard l
Ill\'
J :JC:vb Foun·
• Scholar~htp!i
Funds from the Jaeobs
t"uundatHWtannuall)pro•tdl'"'0 ssoo s,·holar s htps to
s tud,•nls from ~l ar athu n
• W• ~
Count~
,\cadl'llll\'
•
Februo rv_2~
t·:u·cllt'nct' and nrl'd
pnme c unsldt.•ratHlfl!i
Studt·nts ..,nhmg to appl>'
foront;"or mori'St;"holan;hlp:>
shouldcontai't thetrdcparl ·
uwntl·hairmnnfor;tdditiOnal
Information Completrd
,.cholars h•p
app lications
must be rt'lurned to the
Alwmu Assoct:ahon off1Ct' by
llunda} . April IS
·-For :!d<htlonal mWrmaltun.
conlal'l ~ I s 1\ r:um•r.alumm .
l-16-l JIJ7
The great space ri,:roH
THE .P
..:O:.:I..:N.:.:
TE::.R;___
_:_
P.:oog!::c_lc9:.
User fee fails
Sen William ll:!bl!l ch
ht•lpedandsupportrdtht'us<•r
(('1!l-ontr.,..«sr..,h•chr:~Jt'd
tll•arl~
a yl'ar. :r;atd lbndy
l'lls estut•n . Pres1drnt of
l 'mll'd Cuuncll of UW Student
Go•· ernmcnts I f itn ·
plt•menh•d . the p roposal
...·ould ha•· e •irtuall)'
de,.troyfil lntcorcollt'll:!3lt'
athletu:" at thl' cam pusn
nthcr than Mad1son
Umtl'tl l'OOill'tl fought lh1 ~
proposallromlls!JIIrodut·hun
by the SciFi Club
.,..1th the aid of Us member
studt•nt go••ernments
Hrcenlly the Go••e r no r
mo•·t>d to restore about 9<1
pcrn•tUoflhemoncythathad
bfi.>l!wi tllhcld It appears that
tht• mtercollcgla te athlctk
pr(ll!rams
bt san-d .
"W it hout the aid of
k·gt,.laton; hke Sabhtch who
g.a•·e generously of his timl'
andclforbWl'II'OUidnotha•·c
IJt'l'IISUl'CCIS f UI , "satd
:-.:llsl'Jotuen
. .-,u
to be continued
annl'-111~
ont' 5o ph omor1• .
JUmor and S<.'niOt
a~· ard .
and
" n•• or two tiK.'ornmtc fresh·
man au;ards to outstandmg
l:\\SP s tudenb S..•nt('t• to
th•• uni\·rrsily ami ft•llo"
man . plus a htgh Ol(';ulemtc
llndl' potnl art• pnme
t'ntoma Although the dollar
.IIUOUIIIS are betng reduced
thl~ \l'U. lht':K' awards shll
staff
..
__
,,.,
,.,.,...,,..<••"'""~
l"''''" '' "' ·'ntlllt>c
"luto· o ,~ , ,. ll b ·h "
RHC sponsors comic contest
Cunlt>Sl gwdl'hrll:~
el l Thl'SI:ot best "funntt? "
..,1 llbe...-dforstattoner)
Each of the.- ~ex ..,nners 11111
r«etn•SlO
HHtdence Hall Council u;
~ponsonng a eampus-wtde
contest for promoting com1c
statione r y based on
121
Any ca r toons .
Wltventty life .
After the
contest , the chosen autlonery caricatures. s-ayings may be
heacb will be prlnled and sold St'flt to Patty , 325 Hytr Hall.
to at!Jdmt. for !Mir penonal viacampusmailbyMarchlt,
lt'14 •
....
\~lll'll s ubnuthng en·
plxe nnl~ one dra..,1ng
IJ('f'P:tlt'ofpapcr
Plo:J!M'
ux:ludt• name . addfeu and
phone nwnber
U l Ideas lor the com!<.'
ilahont'ry contest ma)' m c ludc Point beer. elaSit'S.
midence hall life, s tudent
aclivthn,lhe IQUUt'. s tudent
pemment. ptofe1501'1, etc.
1J t
,,.,,, , .,,.,,,..,.,,.,[1!11:.!
HOW TO PLA N YOUR ENGAGEMENT AND WEDD ING
~;.ft:.:;.~••:::..":' .:::":~-;, ~::.:·:~.-;;;· :.~..;.~;:--:.~::::..."".;;t •
···:
lrt!'S .
"'EE .. SAMf (IIA ... O"'D ~ I"'GS 80.KIIO SVRACUSf H V ll:XU
\..
•
Abolish finals week!
· Editori al Page
U!!!.fP'
p 0 I NT ER
s tudent o\'er com e by the
s tress of fac m g exams .
Su1cidc a ttempt s beco me
more frequent as the long
hours of crlltniUing e rode a
It is now t ime to studrnt 's reststnncc to suc h a
fina l examination rash ac t . The um,•crsi ty a nd
these tw o -hour
,..._...co'·••' • " ·· and the practtcc or parents prcs..o; ure the s tudent
selling as 1de a sepa rate week to compete hCLt\•ll y wilhin the
obso lete g r ad m g sys t em.
for fina ls
Most of the facully have making the two-hour exam an
Wltoely dis continued g 1ving all or nothing proposition .
hn al exams span'n•ng the .
A two·hour cxam at the e nd
course conte nts of an entire nf a coursc certainly comes
scm t.'Sicr The tests they do too late to hm•c nny va lue
admwis te r can be com pl e ted upon the learn111g ex perience .
Nor w1ll 11 prcpa r e the
~:t th1n a normal class scs.s1on.
It •s 11mc to rea lize that s tudent for futurt- courses.
lr:::::::::::::::;iiiii1l
b\' l};t\'~ Gn~lser
Um \•ci-s•t)' policy presently
dictates that instructors meet
w1th thc1r students during n
s tudent s lea r n more froin
mstnK·tors than final exams
two-hour sessions arc a
waste or prec ious 11me.
UW-Os hkosh ha s r cccnlly
:aboli s hed final s week .
Oasscs there will continue to
meet dur •ng th.Dt week . " for
the purpose of ins truction ,
cons ult ation
and
exa mmat10n . ·· Their new
prog rnm is des1gned to
change . " the existing em ·
phnsis from evalunti on of
s tudent performance in a twohour writlen exa minati on to a
t.•ontmumg process over the
enti re semester ."
UW-Stou t abolished finals
some 11me ago on the heels of
a su1c1de note le rt by a
nw
Register here-it
makes a difference
by 1\ob Ke rk sleck
Abou t 1.000 students have
s1gned the petition against
the ~h ch1gan Ave . ex tension.
Do they honestly believe that
by s1 gmng a paper h.anded to
them at lunc h or in a dorm
lohby they will accomplis h
anything"
F1gures show that less than
20 percent !maybe as few as
10 percenl l of those 1.000
students a re regis tered to
vote' ! cer ta 1nly don 't believe
the c 1ty council or the count y
boa rd will follow the will of a
mere cou pl e hundr ed
regis te red s tude nts .
And
certainl y not in this case,
whe re it JNOUid mean acting
a ga1~ested in t e r es t
' thin the co m g r oups
munity
But maybe i~we couJd get a
s tudent or two e lected to
those bodies to voice ou r
op1mons . t hing m ight be
diHe rent. Especially if thev
were backed by a few thousa nd
regtstered voters .
The Student Norm
I have been informed by
reli able sources that at least
two students w ill be running
for oHi ce l one for ci ty
a lderma n a nd one for county
supervisor ! in the April 2
elections.
Both a re going to have a
tough time wi nn ing . as both
will be waging w r ite -in
ca mpaigns . If you want those
two s tudents to represent you .
you a re going to have to
register before Ma rth 20 and
\'Ole for them April 2.
1 think I've heard mos t of
the reasons for not voting .
People have told me that they
don't believe the r e a r e any
issues which rea lly concern
them . or they don't believe
thoir one vote will make a
di fference .
But this time we have the
1ssues of the mall ( the student
running !or ci ty council will
be fa ci ng an incumbent opponent from an ove r whelming ly s tudent ward
...,,ho opposed the mall from
the s tnrt 1 and the Michigan
A\'C . e xtcns1on on the local
leve l
Underfunding for
LI\\' SP . u s er f ees a nd
gradua te c uts still fa ce us on
the state level. Federal bills
concer ni ng financial aids a re
com mg up. They will cer tainly a ff ect us . And in the
local election April 2. a few
\'Otes may make a great
diHe r ence .
R eg1s t e r be f o r e Ma r c h
20 Vole April 2.
Pertodic evalua tion during
the semester would be far
more beneficia l t o th e
s tudent 's progr ess. The
s tud e nt wo uld bear th e
respons ibility of keeping up
w1t h co ur se mate r ial s
t hr o u g h o ut t h e s em es t e r
rathe r than c r amm mg It all
at the end . The instructor
could no longer take the easy
way nul in giving two tests nil
st' lllCStCT a nd pile C\'Crything
nn at the e nd.
Aboli s hing final s week at
UWSP c:1n 't come too soon for
;~ny of us
Since you didn't osk
Russia today
by Jtrry Long
The a rrest a nd s ubsequent
depor tation of Nobel Prize
w 1nner .
A l exande r
Solzhe nit syn . s hows wi th
crystal line cl arity thnt the
basic in terna l policies of the
leaders or the Soviet Uni on
;~re not radically c hanged
from the days of J oseph
Stnlin . It is s till the intent or
the Politburo th a t what we in
the United States ca ll our
nght to fret! speech sha ll not
be fr eely exercised in the
So\' ICl Umon
Ttue. polit ical dissen ters
arc no longer s hot . a s once
wns the cast.• If the political
d1ssi dent is a Nobel lau rea te .
he becomes a non-person .
ost r ncized !r.DD"l SOCiety. as
wn s Sorts Pn s tcrnak If he
contmues 1n h1s d1 ssent. he is
s tnpped o f ht s nath·e
ctllzcnsh1p and deported to
the Wes t Lesse r di ssi dents
arc s till st>nt to forced -labor
camps and extled to Siberia .
So lzh emtsyn s pent eight
years 1n one of those ca mps
after World Wa r II
That
Solzhemtsyn was t hrown out
of RUSSia and not tmpn soned
;~gain is a n mdicntion of the
1mporta nce th e Kr em li n
pla ces o n i ntcrnntional
upimon . The reason that the
Cen tral Committee was easy
un Solzhenitsyn w35 tha t it
...,as poht1cally e xpedient to
do so 11\e outcry of protes t
ought get 111 the way of inlt.•rnattonal dealings s hould
Solzhe nitsyn be more ha rshly
treated .
11le tragedy of Alcxa nder
- lzhemtsyn 1s further ac Cl'ntuatcd by the fact that he .
like Oos t ocvs k t. T o ls toy
and Pasterna k before him . IS
spmtually marr ied to his
Huss1an hom e la nd
To
separate h1m from Iu s nati ve
soil is to s ('nt cnce him to a
Ind eed .
s piritua l death
Solzhcnitsyn ha d expressed a
preference for dea th ra ther
that deportation . And the fact
that the author 's family hns
not yet been a llowed to jolrf
him in e xile must weigh
hcavi ly on his mind.
Wc in the United States,
with our First Amendment,
tend to be s mug a nd In·
different to bla tant politlctll
oppre ssion b y tolalitnrian
government s . It seems that
ex pedte ncy in t e rm s o f
detente . o r in te rm s o f
ove rseas milit ary establi sh ment s is more important to us
than the 111humanily to which
peo p le liv ing under s uc h
regimes nrc s ub ject. The
phght of Russia n Jewry . for
ms tance. h;:as long been apparent to us, t>ut only recentl y
has our government done
a nythmg about it - 'oloi th o n~y
o;pott y res ult s . Thts a pathy 1s
not s urpris in g wh e n yo u
comuder thn t there are many
prop le who . like J ose ph
Sien k ~ewicz. feel that US
fore1gn policy is dictated by
the "si mpering " of the US
J ewtsh co mmunit y
Sienkiewicz" reasoning , as he
ex pressed 11 recently at a
le c ture given
by
Congr ess man Dave Obey.
Sl't!ms to run something like
this : The problems in US
forc.•tgn policy . especiall y in
the M1ddle East. can be
blaml-d on the Jews .
Thot sor t of asinine logic
has an uncomfortab l y
fn nu lia r ring to it.
If we are to re tain :my
semblance of huma nit y in our
souls. we must not forget that
Solzheniayn was not the only
diss1dent in Russia. there a re
thousands more . To Utis end
we mus t r eg ard a ll our
dealing s wi th totalit a rian
governments of both left a nd
right. We have disregarded
s uffering humanity at home
and abroad long e nough .
by Taurus S.
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